Chapter
17
`You
see, Hilda,' said Connie after lunch, when they were
nearing London, `you have never known either real
tenderness or real sensuality: and if you do know them,
with the same person, it makes a great difference.'
`For
mercy's sake don't brag about your experiences!' said
Hilda. `I've never met the man yet who was capable of
intimacy with a woman, giving himself up to her. That
was what I wanted. I'm not keen on their self-satisfied
tenderness, and their sensuality. I'm not content to be
any man's little petsy-wetsy, nor his chair à
plaisir either. I wanted a complete intimacy, and I
didn't get it. That's enough for me.
Connie
pondered this. Complete intimacy! She supposed that
meant revealing everything concerning yourself to the
other person, and his revealing everything concerning
himself. But that was a bore. And all that weary
self-consciousness between a man and a woman! a disease!
`I
think you're too conscious of yourself all the time,
with everybody,' she said to her sister.
`I
hope at least I haven't a slave nature,' said Hilda.
`But
perhaps you have! Perhaps you are a slave to your own
idea of yourself.'
Hilda
drove in silence for some time after this piece of
unheard of insolence from that chit Connie.
`At
least I'm not a slave to somebody else's idea of me: and
the somebody else a servant of my husband's,' she
retorted at last, in crude anger.
`You
see, it's not so,' said Connie calmly.
She
had always let herself be dominated by her elder sister.
Now, though somewhere inside herself she was weeping,
she was free of the dominion of other women. Ah!
that in itself was a relief, like being given another
life: to be free of the strange dominion and obsession
of other women. How awful they were, women!
She
was glad to be with her father, whose favourite she had
always been. She and Hilda stayed in a little hotel off
Pall Mall, and Sir Malcolm was in his club. But he took
his daughters out in the evening, and they liked going
with him.
He
was still handsome and robust, though just a little
afraid of the new world that had sprung up around him.
He had got a second wife in Scotland, younger than
himself and richer. But he had as many holidays away
from her as possible: just as with his first wife.
Connie
sat next to him at the opera. He was moderately stout,
and had stout thighs, but they were still strong and
well-knit, the thighs of a healthy man who had taken his
pleasure in life. His good-humoured selfishness, his
dogged sort of independence, his unrepenting sensuality,
it seemed to Connie she could see them all in his
well-knit straight thighs. Just a man! And now becoming
an old man, which is sad. Because in his strong, thick
male legs there was none of the alert sensitiveness and
power of tenderness which is the very essence of youth,
that which never dies, once it is there.
Connie
woke up to the existence of legs. They became more
important to her than faces, which are no longer very
real. How few people had live, alert legs! She looked at
the men in the stalls. Great puddingy thighs in black
pudding-cloth, or lean wooden sticks in black funeral
stuff, or well-shaped young legs without any meaning
whatever, either sensuality or tenderness or
sensitiveness, just mere leggy ordinariness that pranced
around. Not even any sensuality like her father's. They
were all daunted, daunted out of existence.
But
the women were not daunted. The awful mill-posts of most
females! really shocking, really enough to justify
murder! Or the poor thin pegs! or the trim neat things
in silk stockings, without the slightest look of life!
Awful, the millions of meaningless legs prancing
meaninglessly around!
But
she was not happy in London. The people seemed so
spectral and blank. They had no alive happiness, no
matter how brisk and good-looking they were. It was all
barren. And Connie had a woman's blind craving for
happiness, to be assured of happiness.
In
Paris at any rate she felt a bit of sensuality still.
But what a weary, tired, worn-out sensuality. Worn-out
for lack of tenderness. Oh! Paris was sad. One of the
saddest towns: weary of its now-mechanical sensuality,
weary of the tension of money, money, money, weary even
of resentment and conceit, just weary to death, and
still not sufficiently Americanized or Londonized to
hide the weariness under a mechanical jig-jig-jig! Ah,
these manly he-men, these flâneurs, the
oglers, these eaters of good dinners! How weary they
were! weary, worn-out for lack of a little tenderness,
given and taken. The efficient, sometimes charming women
knew a thing or two about the sensual realities: they
had that pull over their jigging English sisters. But
they knew even less of tenderness. Dry, with the endless
dry tension of will, they too were wearing out. The
human world was just getting worn out. Perhaps it would
turn fiercely destructive. A sort of anarchy! Clifford
and his conservative anarchy! Perhaps it wouldn't be
conservative much longer. Perhaps it would develop into
a very radical anarchy.
Connie
found herself shrinking and afraid of the world.
Sometimes she was happy for a little while in the
Boulevards or in the Bois or the Luxembourg Gardens. But
already Paris was full of Americans and English, strange
Americans in the oddest uniforms, and the usual dreary
English that are so hopeless abroad.
She
was glad to drive on. It was suddenly hot weather, so
Hilda was going through Switzerland and over the
Brenner, then through the Dolomites down to Venice.
Hilda loved all the managing and the driving and being
mistress of the show. Connie was quite content to keep
quiet.
And
the trip was really quite nice. Only Connie kept saying
to herself: Why don't I really care! Why am I never
really thrilled? How awful, that I don't really care
about the landscape any more! But I don't. It's rather
awful. I'm like Saint Bernard, who could sail down the
lake of Lucerne without ever noticing that there were
even mountain and green water. I just don't care for
landscape any more. Why should one stare at it? Why
should one? I refuse to.
No,
she found nothing vital in France or Switzerland or the
Tyrol or Italy. She just was carted through it all. And
it was all less real than Wragby. Less real than the
awful Wragby! She felt she didn't care if she never saw
France or Switzerland or Italy again. They'd keep.
Wragby was more real.
As
for people! people were all alike, with very little
difference. They all wanted to get money out of you: or,
if they were travellers, they wanted to get enjoyment,
perforce, like squeezing blood out of a stone. Poor
mountains! poor landscape! it all had to be squeezed and
squeezed and squeezed again, to provide a thrill, to
provide enjoyment. What did people mean, with their
simply determined enjoying of themselves?
No!
said Connie to herself I'd rather be at Wragby, where I
can go about and be still, and not stare at anything or
do any performing of any sort. This tourist performance
of enjoying oneself is too hopelessly humiliating: it's
such a failure.
She
wanted to go back to Wragby, even to Clifford, even to
poor crippled Clifford. He wasn't such a fool as this
swarming holidaying lot, anyhow.
But
in her inner consciousness she was keeping touch with
the other man. She mustn't let her connexion with him
go: oh, she mustn't let it go, or she was lost, lost
utterly in this world of riff-raffy expensive people and
joy-hogs. Oh, the joy-hogs! Oh `enjoying oneself'!
Another modern form of sickness.
They
left the car in Mestre, in a garage, and took the
regular steamer over to Venice. It was a lovely summer
afternoon, the shallow lagoon rippled, the full sunshine
made Venice, turning its back to them across the water,
look dim.
At
the station quay they changed to a gondola, giving the
man the address. He was a regular gondolier in a
white-and-blue blouse, not very good-looking, not at all
impressive.
`Yes!
The Villa Esmeralda! Yes! I know it! I have been the
gondolier for a gentleman there. But a fair distance
out!'
He
seemed a rather childish, impetuous fellow. He rowed
with a certain exaggerated impetuosity, through the dark
side-canals with the horrible, slimy green walls, the
canals that go through the poorer quarters, where the
washing hangs high up on ropes, and there is a slight,
or strong, odour of sewage.
But
at last he came to one of the open canals with pavement
on either side, and looping bridges, that run straight,
at right-angles to the Grand Canal. The two women sat
under the little awning, the man was perched above,
behind them.
`Are
the signorine staying long at the Villa Esmeralda?' he
asked, rowing easy, and `wiping his perspiring face with
a white-and-blue handkerchief.
`Some
twenty days: we are both married ladies,' said Hilda, in
her curious hushed voice, that made her Italian sound so
foreign.
`Ah!
Twenty days!' said the man. There was a pause. After
which he asked: `Do the signore want a gondolier for the
twenty days or so that they will stay at the Villa
Esmeralda? Or by the day, or by the week?'
Connie
and Hilda considered. In Venice, it is always preferable
to have one's own gondola, as it is preferable to have
one's own car on land.
`What
is there at the Villa? what boats?'
`There
is a motor-launch, also a gondola. But---' The but
meant: they won't be your property.
`How
much do you charge?'
It
was about thirty shillings a day, or ten pounds a week.
`Is
that the regular price?' asked Hilda.
`Less,
Signora, less. The regular price---'
The
sisters considered.
`Well,'
said Hilda, `come tomorrow morning, and we will arrange
it. What is your name?'
His
name was Giovanni, and he wanted to know at what time he
should come, and then for whom should he say he was
waiting. Hilda had no card. Connie gave him one of hers.
He glanced at it swiftly, with his hot, southern blue
eyes, then glanced again.
`Ah!'
he said, lighting up. `Milady! Milady, isn't it?'
`Milady
Costanza!' said Connie.
He
nodded, repeating: `Milady Costanza!' and putting the
card carefully away in his blouse.
The
Villa Esmeralda was quite a long way out, on the edge of
the lagoon looking towards Chioggia. It was not a very
old house, and pleasant, with the terraces looking
seawards, and below, quite a big garden with dark trees,
walled in from the lagoon.
Their
host was a heavy, rather coarse Scotchman who had made a
good fortune in Italy before the war, and had been
knighted for his ultrapatriotism during the war. His
wife was a thin, pale, sharp kind of person with no
fortune of her own, and the misfortune of having to
regulate her husband's rather sordid amorous exploits.
He was terribly tiresome with the servants. But having
had a slight stroke during the winter, he was now more
manageable.
The
house was pretty full. Besides Sir Malcolm and his two
daughters, there were seven more people, a Scotch
couple, again with two daughters; a young Italian
Contessa, a widow; a young Georgian prince, and a
youngish English clergyman who had had pneumonia and was
being chaplain to Sir Alexander for his health's sake.
The prince was penniless, good-looking, would make an
excellent chauffeur, with the necessary impudence, and
basta! The Contessa was a quiet little puss with a game
on somewhere. The clergyman was a raw simple fellow from
a Bucks vicarage: luckily he had left his wife and two
children at home. And the Guthries, the family of four,
were good solid Edinburgh middle class, enjoying
everything in a solid fashion, and daring everything
while risking nothing.
Connie
and Hilda ruled out the prince at once. The Guthries
were more or less their own sort, substantial, hut
boring: and the girls wanted husbands. The chaplain was
not a had fellow, but too deferential. Sir Alexander,
after his slight stroke, had a terrible heaviness his
joviality, but he was still thrilled at the presence of
so many handsome young women. Lady Cooper was a quiet,
catty person who had a thin time of it, poor thing, and
who watched every other woman with a cold watchfulness
that had become her second nature, and who said cold,
nasty little things which showed what an utterly low
opinion she had of all human nature. She was also quite
venomously overbearing with the servants, Connie found:
but in a quiet way. And she skilfully behaved so that
Sir Alexander should think that he was lord and
monarch of the whole caboosh, with his stout,
would-be-genial paunch, and his utterly boring jokes,
his humourosity, as Hilda called it.
Sir
Malcolm was painting. Yes, he still would do a Venetian
lagoonscape, now and then, in contrast to his Scottish
landscapes. So in the morning he was rowed off with a
huge canvas, to his `site'. A little later, Lady Cooper
would he rowed off into the heart of the city, with
sketching-block and colours. She was an inveterate
watercolour painter, and the house was full of rose-coloured
palaces, dark canals, swaying bridges, medieval facades,
and so on. A little later the Guthries, the prince, the
countess, Sir Alexander, and sometimes Mr Lind, the
chaplain, would go off to the Lido, where they would
bathe; coming home to a late lunch at half past one.
The
house-party, as a house-party, was distinctly boring.
But this did not trouble the sisters. They were out all
the time. Their father took them to the exhibition,
miles and miles of weary paintings. He took them to all
the cronies of his in the Villa Lucchese, he sat with
them on warm evenings in the piazza, having got a table
at Florian's: he took them to the theatre, to the
Goldoni plays. There were illuminated water-fêtes,
there were dances. This was a holiday-place of all
holiday-places. The Lido, with its acres of sun-pinked
or pyjamaed bodies, was like a strand with an endless
heap of seals come up for mating. Too many people in the
piazza, too many limbs and trunks of humanity on the
Lido, too many gondolas, too many motor-launches, too
many steamers, too many pigeons, too many ices, too many
cocktails, too many menservants wanting tips, too many
languages rattling, too much, too much sun, too much
smell of Venice, too many cargoes of strawberries, too
many silk shawls, too many huge, raw-beef slices of
watermelon on stalls: too much enjoyment, altogether far
too much enjoyment!
Connie
and Hilda went around in their sunny frocks. There were
dozens of people they knew, dozens of people knew them.
Michaelis turned up like a bad penny. `Hullo! Where you
staying? Come and have an ice-cream or something! Come
with me somewhere in my gondola.' Even Michaelis almost
sun-burned: though sun-cooked is more appropriate to the
look of the mass of human flesh.
It
was pleasant in a way. It was almost enjoyment.
But anyhow, with all the cocktails, all the lying in
warmish water and sunbathing on hot sand in hot sun,
jazzing with your stomach up against some fellow in the
warm nights, cooling off with ices, it was a complete
narcotic. And that was what they all wanted, a drug: the
slow water, a drug; the sun, a drug; jazz, a drug;
cigarettes, cocktails, ices, vermouth. To be drugged!
Enjoyment! Enjoyment!
Hilda
half liked being drugged. She liked looking at all the
women, speculating about them. The women were
absorbingly interested in the women. How does she look!
what man has she captured? what fun is she getting out
of it?---The men were like great dogs in white flannel
trousers, waiting to be patted, waiting to wallow,
waiting to plaster some woman's stomach against their
own, in jazz.
Hilda
liked jazz, because she could plaster her stomach
against the stomach of some so-called man, and let him
control her movement from the visceral centre, here and
there across the floor, and then she could break loose
and ignore `the creature'. He had been merely made use
of. Poor Connie was rather unhappy. She wouldn't jazz,
because she simply couldn't plaster her stomach against
some `creature's' stomach. She hated the conglomerate
mass of nearly nude flesh on the Lido: there was hardly
enough water to wet them all. She disliked Sir Alexander
and Lady Cooper. She did not want Michaelis or anybody
else trailing her.
The
happiest times were when she got Hilda to go with her
away across the lagoon, far across to some lonely
shingle-bank, where they could bathe quite alone, the
gondola remaining on the inner side of the reef.
Then
Giovanni got another gondolier to help him, because it
was a long way and he sweated terrifically in the sun.
Giovanni was very nice: affectionate, as the Italians
are, and quite passionless. The Italians are not
passionate: passion has deep reserves. They are easily
moved, and often affectionate, but they rarely have any
abiding passion of any sort.
So
Giovanni was already devoted to his ladies, as he had
been devoted to cargoes of ladies in the past. He was
perfectly ready to prostitute himself to them, if they
wanted hint: he secretly hoped they would want him. They
would give him a handsome present, and it would come in
very handy, as he was just going to be married. He told
them about his marriage, and they were suitably
interested.
He
thought this trip to some lonely bank across the lagoon
probably meant business: business being l'amore,
love. So he got a mate to help him, for it was a long
way; and after all, they were two ladies. Two ladies,
two mackerels! Good arithmetic! Beautiful ladies, too!
He was justly proud of them. And though it was the
Signora who paid him and gave him orders, he rather
hoped it would be the young milady who would select hint
for l'amore. She would give more money too.
The
mate he brought was called Daniele. He was not a regular
gondolier, so he had none of the cadger and prostitute
about him. He was a sandola man, a sandola being a big
boat that brings in fruit and produce from the islands.
Daniele
was beautiful, tall and well-shapen, with a light round
head of little, close, pale-blond curls, and a
good-looking man's face, a little like a lion, and
long-distance blue eyes. He was not effusive,
loquacious, and bibulous like Giovanni. He was silent
and he rowed with a strength and ease as if he were
alone on the water. The ladies were ladies, remote from
him. He did not even look at them. He looked ahead.
He
was a real man, a little angry when Giovanni drank too
much wine and rowed awkwardly, with effusive shoves of
the great oar. He was a man as Mellors was a man,
unprostituted. Connie pitied the wife of the
easily-overflowing Giovanni. But Daniele's wife would be
one of those sweet Venetian women of the people whom one
still sees, modest and flower-like in the back of that
labyrinth of a town.
Ah,
how sad that man first prostitutes woman, then woman
prostitutes man. Giovanni was pining to prostitute
himself, dribbling like a dog, wanting to give himself
to a woman. And for money!
Connie
looked at Venice far off, low and rose-coloured upon the
water. Built of money, blossomed of money, and dead with
money. The money-deadness! Money, money, money,
prostitution and deadness.
Yet
Daniele was still a man capable of a man's free
allegiance. He did not wear the gondolier's blouse: only
the knitted blue jersey. He was a little wild, uncouth
and proud. So he was hireling to the rather doggy
Giovanni who was hireling again to two women. So it is!
When Jesus refused the devil's money, he left the devil
like a Jewish banker, master of the whole situation.
Connie
would come home from the blazing light of the lagoon in
a kind of stupor, to lind letters from home. Clifford
wrote regularly. He wrote very good letters: they might
all have been printed in a book. And for this reason
Connie found them not very interesting.
She
lived in the stupor of the light of the lagoon, the
lapping saltiness of the water, the space, the
emptiness, the nothingness: but health, health, complete
stupor of health. It was gratifying, and she was lulled
away in it, not caring for anything. Besides, she was
pregnant. She knew now. So the stupor of sunlight and
lagoon salt and sea-bathing and lying on shingle and
finding shells and drifting away, away in a gondola, was
completed by the pregnancy inside her, another fullness
of health, satisfying and stupefying.
She
had been at Venice a fortnight, and she was to stay
another ten days or a fortnight. The sunshine blazed
over any count of time, and the fullness of physical
health made forgetfulness complete. She was in a sort of
stupor of well-being.
From
which a letter of Clifford roused her.
We
too have had our mild local excitement. It appears the
truant wife of Mellors, the keeper, turned up at the
cottage and found herself unwelcome. He packed her
off, and locked the door. Report has it, however, that
when he returned from the wood he found the no longer
fair lady firmly established in his bed, in puris
naturalibus; or one should say, in impuris
naturalibus. She had broken a window and got in
that way. Unable to evict the somewhat man-handled
Venus from his couch, he beat a retreat and retired,
it is said, to his mother's house in Tevershall.
Meanwhile the Venus of Stacks Gate is established in
the cottage, which she claims is her home, and Apollo,
apparently, is domiciled in Tevershall.
I
repeat this from hearsay, as Mellors has not come to
me personally. I had this particular bit of local
garbage from our garbage bird, our ibis, our
scavenging turkey-buzzard, Mrs Bolton. I would not
have repeated it had she not exclaimed: her Ladyship
will go no more to the wood if that woman's
going to be about!
I
like your picture of Sir Malcolm striding into the sea
with white hair blowing and pink flesh glowing. I envy
you that sun. Here it rains. But I don't envy Sir
Malcolm his inveterate mortal carnality. However, it
suits his age. Apparently one grows more carnal and
more mortal as one grows older. Only youth has a taste
of immortality---
This
news affected Connie in her state of semi-stupefied ell
being with vexation amounting to exasperation. Now she
ad got to be bothered by that beast of a woman! Now she
must start and fret! She had no letter from Mellors.
They had agreed not to write at all, but now she wanted
to hear from him personally. After all, he was the
father of the child that was coming. Let him write!
But
how hateful! Now everything was messed up. How foul
those low people were! How nice it was here, in the
sunshine and the indolence, compared to that dismal mess
of that English Midlands! After all, a clear sky was
almost the most important thing in life.
She
did not mention the fact of her pregnancy, even to
Hilda. She wrote to Mrs Bolton for exact information.
Duncan
Forbes, an artist friend of theirs, had arrived at the
Villa Esmeralda, coming north from Rome. Now he made a
third in the gondola, and he bathed with them across the
lagoon, and was their escort: a quiet, almost taciturn
young man, very advanced in his art.
She
had a letter from Mrs Bolton:
You
will be pleased, I am sure, my Lady, when you see Sir
Clifford. He's looking quite blooming and working very
hard, and very hopeful. Of course he is looking
forward to seeing you among us again. It is a dull
house without my Lady, and we shall all welcome her
presence among us once more.
About
Mr Mellors, I don't know how much Sir Clifford told
you. It seems his wife came back all of a sudden one
afternoon, and he found her sitting on the doorstep
when he came in from the wood. She said she was come
back to him and wanted to live with him again, as she
was his legal wife, and he wasn't going to divorce
her. But he wouldn't have anything to do with her, and
wouldn't let her in the house, and did not go in
himself; he went back into the wood without ever
opening the door.
But
when he came back after dark, he found the house
broken into, so he went upstairs to see what she'd
done, and he found her in bed without a rag on her. He
offered her money, but she said she was his wife and
he must take her back. I don't know what sort of a
scene they had. His mother told me about it, she's
terribly upset. Well, he told her he'd die rather than
ever live with her again, so he took his things and
went straight to his mother's on Tevershall hill. He
stopped the night and went to the wood next day
through the park, never going near the cottage. It
seems he never saw his wife that day. But the day
after she was at her brother Pan's at Beggarlee,
swearing and carrying on, saying she was his legal
wife, and that he'd beers having women at the cottage,
because she'd found a scent-bottle in his drawer, and
gold-tipped cigarette-ends on the ash-heap, and I
don't know what all. Then it seems the postman Fred
Kirk says he heard somebody talking in Mr Mellors'
bedroom early one morning, and a motor-car had been in
the lane.
Mr
Mellors stayed on with his mother, and went to the
wood through the park, and it seems she stayed on at
the cottage. Well, there was no end of talk. So at
last Mr Mellors and Tom Phillips went to the cottage
and fetched away most of the furniture and bedding,
and unscrewed the handle of the pump, so she was
forced to go. But instead of going back to Stacks Gate
she went and lodged with that Mrs Swain at Beggarlee,
because her brother Dan's wife wouldn't have her. And
she kept going to old Mrs Mellors' house, to catch
him, and she began swearing he'd got in bed with her
in the cottage and she went to a lawyer to make him
pay her an allowance. She's grown heavy, and more
common than ever, and as strong as a bull. And she
goes about saying the most awful things about him, how
he has women at the cottage, and how he behaved to her
when they were married, the low, beastly things he did
to her, and I don't know what all. I'm sure it's
awful, the mischief a woman can do, once she starts
talking. And no matter how low she may be, there'll be
some as will believe her, and some of the dirt will
stick. I'm sure the way she makes out that Mr Mellors
was one of those low, beastly men with women, is
simply shocking. And people are only too ready to
believe things against anybody, especially things like
that. She declared she'll never leave him alone while
he lives. Though what I say is, if he was so beastly
to her, why is she so anxious to go back to him? But
of course she's coming near her change of life, for
she's years older than he is. And these common,
violent women always go partly insane whets the change
of life comes upon them---
This
was a nasty blow to Connie. Here she was, sure as life,
coming in for her share of the lowness and dirt. She
felt angry with him for not having got clear of a Bertha
Coutts: nay, for ever having married her. Perhaps he had
a certain hankering after lowness. Connie remembered the
last night she had spent with him, and shivered. He had
known all that sensuality, even with a Bertha Coutts! It
was really rather disgusting. It would be well to be rid
of him, clear of him altogether. He was perhaps really
common, really low.
She
had a revulsion against the whole affair, and almost
envied the Guthrie girls their gawky inexperience and
crude maidenliness. And she now dreaded the thought that
anybody would know about herself and the keeper. How
unspeakably humiliating! She was weary, afraid, and felt
a craving for utter respectability, even for the vulgar
and deadening respectability of the Guthrie girls. If
Clifford knew about her affair, how unspeakably
humiliating! She was afraid, terrified of society and
its unclean bite. She almost wished she could get rid of
the child again, and be quite clear. In short, she fell
into a state of funk.
As
for the scent-bottle, that was her own folly. She had
not been able to refrain from perfuming his one or two
handkerchiefs and his shirts in the drawer, just out of
childishness, and she had left a little bottle of Coty's
Wood-violet perfume, half empty, among his things. She
wanted him to remember her in the perfume. As for the
cigarette-ends, they were Hilda's.
She
could not help confiding a little in Duncan Forbes. She
didn't say she had been the keeper's lover, she only
said she liked him, and told Forbes the history of the
man.
`Oh,'
said Forbes, `you'll see, they'll never rest till
they've pulled the man down and done him its. If he has
refused to creep up into the middle classes, when he had
a chance; and if he's a man who stands up for his own
sex, then they'll do him in. It's the one thing they
won't let you be, straight and open in your sex. You can
be as dirty as you like. In fact the more dirt you do on
sex the better they like it. But if you believe in your
own sex, and won't have it done dirt to: they'll down
you. It's the one insane taboo left: sex as a natural
and vital thing. They won't have it, and they'll kill
you before they'll let you have it. You'll see, they'll
hound that man down. And what's he done, after all? If
he's made love to his wife all ends on, hasn't he a
right to? She ought to be proud of it. But you see, even
a low bitch like that turns on him, and uses the hyena
instinct of the mob against sex, to pull him down. You
have a snivel and feel sinful or awful about your sex,
before you're allowed to have any. Oh, they'll hound the
poor devil down.'
Connie
had a revulsion in the opposite direction now. What had
he done, after all? what had he done to herself, Connie,
but give her an exquisite pleasure and a sense of
freedom and life? He had released her warm, natural
sexual flow. And for that they would hound him down.
No
no, it should not be. She saw the image of him, naked
white with tanned face and hands, looking down and
addressing his erect penis as if it were another being,
the odd grin flickering on his face. And she heard his
voice again: Tha's got the nicest woman's arse of
anybody! And she felt his hand warmly and softly closing
over her tail again, over her secret places, like a
benediction. And the warmth ran through her womb, and
the little flames flickered in her knees, and she said:
Oh, no! I mustn't go back on it! I must not go back on
him. I must stick to him and to what I had of him,
through everything. I had no warm, flamy life till he
gave it me. And I won't go back on it.
She
did a rash thing. She sent a letter to Ivy Bolton,
enclosing a note to the keeper, and asking Mrs Bolton to
give it him. And she wrote to him:
I
am very much distressed to hear of all the trouble
your wife is making for you, but don't mind it, it is
only a sort of hysteria. It will all blow over as
suddenly as it came. But I'm awfully sorry about it,
and I do hope you are not minding very much. After
all, it isn't worth it. She is only a hysterical woman
who wants to hurt you. I shall be home in ten days'
time, and I do hope everything will be all right.
A
few days later came a letter from Clifford. He was
evidently upset.
I
am delighted to hear you are prepared to leave Venice
on the sixteenth. But if you are enjoying it, don't
hurry home. We miss you, Wragby misses you. But it is
essential that you should get your full amount of
sunshine, sunshine and pyjamas, as the advertisements
of the Lido say. So please do stay on a little longer,
if it is cheering you up and preparing you for our
sufficiently awful winter. Even today, it rains.
I
am assiduously, admirably looked after by Mrs Bolton.
She is a queer specimen. The more I live, the more I
realize what strange creatures human beings are. Some
of them might Just as well have a hundred legs, like a
centipede, or six, like a lobster. The human
consistency and dignity one has been led to expect
from one's fellow-men seem actually nonexistent. One
doubts if they exist to any startling degree even is
oneself.
The
scandal of the keeper continues and gets bigger like a
snowball. Mrs Bolton keeps me informed. She reminds me
of a fish which, though dumb, seems to be breathing
silent gossip through its gills, while ever it lives.
All goes through the sieve of her gills, and nothing
surprises her. It is as if the events of other
people's lives were the necessary oxygen of her own.
She
is preoccupied with tie Mellors scandal, and if I will
let her begin, she takes me down to the depths. Her
great indignation, which even then is like the
indignation of an actress playing a role, is against
the wife of Mellors, whom she persists in calling
Bertha Courts. I have been to the depths of the muddy
lies of the Bertha Couttses of this world, and when,
released from the current of gossip, I slowly rise to
the surface again, I look at the daylight its wonder
that it ever should be.
It
seems to me absolutely true, that our world, which
appears to us the surface of all things, is really the
bottom of a deep ocean: all our trees are
submarine growths, and we are weird, scaly-clad
submarine fauna, feeding ourselves on offal like
shrimps. Only occasionally the soul rises gasping
through the fathomless fathoms under which we live,
far up to the surface of the ether, where there is
true air. I am convinced that the air we normally
breathe is a kind of water, and men and women are a
species of fish.
But
sometimes the soul does come up, shoots like a
kittiwake into the light, with ecstasy, after having
preyed on the submarine depths. It is our mortal
destiny, I suppose, to prey upon the ghastly
subaqueous life of our fellow-men, in the submarine
jungle of mankind. But our immortal destiny is to
escape, once we have swallowed our swimmy catch, up
again into the bright ether, bursting out from the
surface of Old Ocean into real light. Then one
realizes one's eternal nature.
When
I hear Mrs Bolton talk, I feel myself plunging down,
down, to the depths where the fish of human secrets
wriggle and swim. Carnal appetite makes one seize a
beakful of prey: then up, up again, out of the dense
into the ethereal, from the wet into the dry. To you I
can tell the whole process. But with Mrs Bolton I only
feel the downward plunge, down, horribly, among the
sea-weeds and the pallid monsters of the very bottom.
I
am afraid we are going to lose our game-keeper. The
scandal of the truant wife, instead of dying down, has
reverberated to greater and greater dimensions. He is
accused of all unspeakable things and curiously
enough, the woman has managed to get the bulk of the
colliers' wives behind her, gruesome fish, and the
village is putrescent with talk.
I
hear this Bertha Coutts besieges Mellors in his
mother's house, having ransacked the cottage and the
hut. She seized one day upon her own daughter, as that
chip of the female block was returning from school;
but the little one, instead of kissing the loving
mother's hand, bit it firmly, and so received from the
other hand a smack in the face which sent her reeling
into the gutter: whence she was rescued by an
indignant and harassed grandmother.
The
woman has blown off an amazing quantity of poison-gas.
She has aired in detail all those incidents of her
conjugal life which are usually buried down in the
deepest grave of matrimonial silence, between married
couples. Having chosen to exhume them, after ten years
of burial, she has a weird array. I hear these details
from Linley and the doctor: the latter being amused.
Of course there is really nothing in it. Humanity has
always had a strange avidity for unusual sexual
postures, and if a man likes to use his wife, as
Benvenuto Cellini says, `in the Italian way', well
that is a matter of taste. But I had hardly expected
our game-keeper to be up to so many tricks. No doubt
Bertha Coutts herself first put him up to them. In any
case, it is a matter of their own personal squalor,
and nothing to do with anybody else.
However,
everybody listens: as I do myself. A dozen years ago,
common decency would have hushed the thing. But common
decency no longer exists, and the colliers' wives are
all up in arms and unabashed in voice. One would think
every child in Tevershall, for the last fifty years,
had been an immaculate conception, and every one of
our nonconformist females was a shining Joan of Arc.
That our estimable game-keeper should have about him a
touch of Rabelais seems to make him more monstrous and
shocking than a murderer like Crippen. Yet these
people in Tevershall are a loose lot, if one is to
believe all accounts.
The
trouble is, however, the execrable Bertha Coutts has
not confined herself to her own experiences and
sufferings. She has discovered, at the top of her
voice, that her husband has been `keeping' women down
at the cottage, and has made a few random shots at
naming the women. This has brought a few decent names
trailing through the mud, and the thing has gone quite
considerably too far. An injunction has been taken out
against the woman.
I
have had to interview Mellors about the business, as
it was impossible to keep the woman away from the
wood. He goes about as usual, with his
Miller-of-the-Dee air, I care for nobody, no not I, if
nobody care for me! Nevertheless, I shrewdly suspect
he feels like a dog with a tin can tied to its tail:
though he makes a very good show of pretending the tin
can isn't there. But I heard that in the village the
women call away their children if he is passing, as if
he were the Marquis de Sade in person. He goes on with
a certain impudence, but I am afraid the tin can is
firmly tied to his tail, and that inwardly he repeats,
like Don Rodrigo in the Spanish ballad: `Ah, now it
bites me where I most have sinned!'
I
asked him if he thought he would be able to attend to
his duty in the wood, and he said he did not think he
had neglected it. I told him it was a nuisance to have
the woman trespassing: to which he replied that he had
no power to arrest her. Then I hinted at the scandal
and its unpleasant course. `Ay,' he said. `folks
should do their own fuckin', then they wouldn't want
to listen to a lot of clatfart about another man's.'
He
said it with some bitterness, and no doubt it contains
the real germ of truth. The mode of putting it,
however, is neither delicate nor respectful. I hinted
as much, and then I heard the tin can rattle again.
`It's not for a man the shape you're in, Sir Clifford,
to twit me for havin' a cod atween my legs.'
These
things, said indiscriminately to all and sundry, of
course do not help him at all, and the rector, and
Finley, and Burroughs all think it would be as well if
the man left the place.
I
asked him fit was true that he entertained ladies down
at the cottage, and all he said was: `Why, what's that
to you, Sir Clifford?' I told him I intended to have
decency observed on my estate, to which he replied:
`Then you mun button the mouths o' a' th'
women.'---When I pressed him about his manner of life
at the cottage, he said: `Surely you might ma'e a
scandal out o' me an' my bitch Flossie. You've missed
summat there.' As a matter of fact, for an example of
impertinence he'd be hard to beat.
I
asked him fit would be easy for him to find another
job. He said: `If you're hintin' that you'd like to
shunt me out of this job, it'd be easy as wink.' So he
made no trouble at all about leaving at the end of
next week, and apparently is willing to initiate a
young fellow, Joe Chambers, into as many mysteries of
the craft as possible. I told him I would give him a
month's wages extra, when he left. He said he'd rather
I kept my money, as I'd no occasion to ease my
conscience. I asked him what he meant, and he said:
`You don't owe me nothing extra, Sir Clifford, so
don't pay me nothing extra. If you think you see my
shirt hanging out, just tell me.'
Well,
there is the end of it for the time being. The woman
has gone away: we don't know where to: but she is
liable to arrest if she shows her face in Tevershall.
And I heard she is mortally afraid of gaol, because
she merits it so well. Mellors will depart on Saturday
week, and the place will soon become normal again.
Meanwhile,
my dear Connie, if you would enjoy to stay in Venice
or in Switzerland till the beginning of August, I
should be glad to think you were out of all this buzz
of nastiness, which will have died quite away by the
end of the month.
So
you see, we arc deep-sea monsters, and when the
lobster walks on mud, he stirs it up for everybody. We
must perforce take it philosophically.
The
irritation, and the lack of any sympathy in any
direction, of Clifford's letter, had a bad effect on
Connie. But she understood it better when she received
the following from Mellors:
The
cat is out of the bag, along with various other
pussies. You have heard that my wife Bertha came back
to my unloving arms, and took up her abode in the
cottage: where, to speak disrespectfully, she smelled
a rat, in the shape of a little bottle of Coty. Other
evidence she did not find, at least for some days,
when she began to howl about the burnt photograph. She
noticed the glass and the back-board in the square
bedroom. Unfortunately, on the back-board somebody had
scribbled little sketches, and the initials, several
times repeated: C. S. R. This, however, afforded no
clue until she broke into the hut, and found one of
your books, an autobiography of the actress Judith,
with your name, Constance Stewart Reid, on the front
page. After this, for some days she went round loudly
saying that my paramour was no less a person than Lady
Chatterley herself. The news came at last to the
rector, Mr Burroughs, and to Sir Clifford. They then
proceeded to take legal steps against my liege lady,
who for her part disappeared, having always had a
mortal fear of the police.
Sir
Clifford asked to see me, so I went to him. He talked
around things and seemed annoyed with me. Then he
asked if I knew that even her ladyship's name had been
mentioned. I said I never listened to scandal, and was
surprised to hear this bit from Sir Clifford himself.
He said, of course it was a great insult, and I told
him there was Queen Mary on a calendar in the
scullery, no doubt because Her Majesty formed part of
my harem. But he didn't appreciate the sarcasm. He as
good as told me I was a disreputable character also
walked about with my breeches' buttons undone, and I
as good as told him he'd nothing to unbutton anyhow,
so he gave me the sack, and I leave on Saturday week,
and the place thereof shall know me no more.
I
shall go to London, and my old landlady, Mrs Inger, 17
Coburg Square, will either give me a room or will find
one for me.
Be
sure your sins will find you out, especially if you're
married and her name's Bertha---
There
was not a word about herself, or to her. Connie resented
this. He might have said some few words of consolation
or reassurance. But she knew he was leaving her free,
free to go back to Wragby and to Clifford. She resented
that too. He need riot be so falsely chivalrous. She
wished he had said to Clifford: `Yes, she is my lover
and my mistress and I am proud of it!' But his courage
wouldn't carry him so far.
So
her name was coupled with his in Tevershall! It was a
mess. But that would soon die down.
She
was angry, with the complicated and confused anger that
made her inert. She did not know what to do nor what to
say, so she said and did nothing. She went on at Venice
just the same, rowing out in the gondola with Duncan
Forbes, bathing, letting the days slip by. Duncan, who
had been rather depressingly in love with her ten years
ago, was in love with her again. But she said to him: `I
only want one thing of men, and that is, that they
should leave me alone.'
So
Duncan left her alone: really quite pleased to be able
to. All the same, he offered her a soft stream of a
queer, inverted sort of love. He wanted to be with
her.
`Have
you ever thought,' he said to her one day, `how very
little people are connected with one another. Look at
Daniele! He is handsome as a son of the sun. But see how
alone he looks in his handsomeness. Yet I bet he has a
wife and family, and couldn't possibly go away from
them.'
`Ask
him,' said Connie.
Duncan
did so. Daniele said he was married, and had two
children, both male, aged seven and nine. But he
betrayed no emotion over the fact.
`Perhaps
only people who are capable of real togetherness have
that look of being alone in the universe,' said Connie.
`The others have a certain stickiness, they stick to the
mass, like Giovanni.' `And,' she thought to herself,
`like you, Duncan.' |