Chapters
9
Connie
was surprised at her own feeling of aversion from
Clifford. What is more, she felt she had always really
disliked him. Not hate: there was no passion in it. But
a profound physical dislike. Almost, it seemed to her,
she had married him because she disliked him, in a
secret, physical sort of way. But of course, she had
married him really because in a mental way he attracted
her and excited her. He had seemed, in some way, her
master, beyond her.
Now
the mental excitement had worn itself out and collapsed,
and she was aware only of the physical aversion. It rose
up in her from her depths: and she realized how it had
been eating her life away.
She
felt weak and utterly forlorn. She wished some help
would come from outside. But in the whole world there
was no help. Society was terrible because it was insane.
Civilized society is insane. Money and so-called love
are its two great manias; money a long way first. The
individual asserts himself in his disconnected insanity
in these two modes: money and love. Look at Michaelis!
His life and activity were just insanity. His love was a
sort of insanity.
And
Clifford the same. All that talk! All that writing! All
that wild struggling to push himself forwards! It was
just insanity. And it was getting worse, really
maniacal.
Connie
felt washed-out with fear. But at least, Clifford was
shifting his grip from her on to Mrs Bolton. He did not
know it. Like many insane people, his insanity might be
measured by the things he was not aware of the
great desert tracts in his consciousness.
Mrs
Bolton was admirable in many ways. But she had that
queer sort of bossiness, endless assertion of her own
will, which is one of the signs of insanity in modern
woman. She thought she was utterly subservient
and living for others. Clifford fascinated her because
he always, or so of ten, frustrated her will, as if by a
finer instinct. He had a finer, subtler will of
self-assertion than herself. This was his charm for her.
Perhaps
that had been his charm, too, for Connie.
`It's
a lovely day, today!' Mrs Bolton would say in her
caressive, persuasive voice. `I should think you'd enjoy
a little run in your chair today, the sun's just
lovely.'
`Yes?
Will you give me that book---there, that yellow one. And
I think I'll have those hyacinths taken out.'
`Why
they're so beautiful!' She pronounced it with the `y'
sound: be-yutiful! `And the scent is simply gorgeous.'
`The
scent is what I object to,' he said. `It's a little
funereal.'
`Do
you think so!' she exclaimed in surprise, just a little
offended, but impressed. And she carried the hyacinths
out of the room, impressed by his higher fastidiousness.
`Shall
I shave you this morning, or would you rather do it
yourself?' Always the same soft, caressive, subservient,
yet managing voice.
`I
don't know. Do you mind waiting a while. I'll ring when
I'm ready.'
`Very
good, Sir Clifford!' she replied, so soft and
submissive, withdrawing quietly. But every rebuff stored
up new energy of will in her.
When
he rang, after a time, she would appear at once. And
then he would say:
`I
think I'd rather you shaved me this morning.'
Her
heart gave a little thrill, and she replied with extra
softness:
`Very
good, Sir Clifford!'
She
was very deft, with a soft, lingering touch, a little
slow. At first he had resented the infinitely soft touch
of her lingers on his face. But now he liked it, with a
growing voluptuousness. He let her shave him nearly
every day: her face near his, her eyes so very
concentrated, watching that she did it right. And
gradually her fingertips knew his cheeks and lips, his
jaw and chin and throat perfectly. He was well-fed and
well-liking, his face and throat were handsome enough
and he was a gentleman.
She
was handsome too, pale, her face rather long and
absolutely still, her eyes bright, but revealing
nothing. Gradually, with infinite softness, almost with
love, she was getting him by the throat, and he was
yielding to her.
She
now did almost everything for him, and he felt more at
home with her, less ashamed of accepting her menial
offices, than with Connie. She liked handling him. She
loved having his body in her charge, absolutely, to the
last menial offices. She said to Connie one day: `All
men are babies, when you come to the bottom of them.
Why, I've handled some of the toughest customers as ever
went down Tevershall pit. But let anything ail them so
that you have to do for them, and they're babies, just
big babies. Oh, there's not much difference in men!'
At
first Mrs Bolton had thought there really was something
different in a gentleman, a real gentleman, like
Sir Clifford. So Clifford had got a good start of her.
But gradually, as she came to the bottom of him, to use
her own term, she found he was like the rest, a baby
grown to man's proportions: but a baby with a queer
temper and a fine manner and power in its control, and
all sorts of odd knowledge that she had never dreamed
of, with which he could still bully her.
Connie
was sometimes tempted to say to him:
`For
God's sake, don't sink so horribly into the hands of
that woman!' But she found she didn't care for him
enough to say it, in the long run.
It
was still their habit to spend the evening together,
till ten o'clock. Then they would talk, or read
together, or go over his manuscript. But the thrill had
gone out of it. She was bored by his manuscripts. But
she still dutifully typed them out for him. But in time
Mrs Bolton would do even that.
For
Connie had suggested to Mrs Bolton that she should learn
to use a typewriter. And Mrs Bolton, always ready, had
begun at once, and practised assiduously. So now
Clifford would sometimes dictate a letter to her, and
she would take it down rather slowly, but correctly. And
he was very patient, spelling for her the difficult
words, or the occasional phrases in French. She was so
thrilled, it was almost a pleasure to instruct her.
Now
Connie would sometimes plead a headache as an excuse for
going up to her room after dinner.
`Perhaps
Mrs Bolton will play piquet with you,' she said to
Clifford.
`Oh,
I shall be perfectly all right. You go to your own room
and rest, darling.'
But
no sooner had she gone, than he rang for Mrs Bolton, and
asked her to take a hand at piquet or bezique, or even
chess. He had taught her all these games. And Connie
found it curiously objectionable to see Mrs Bolton,
flushed and tremulous like a little girl, touching her
queen or her knight with uncertain fingers, then drawing
away again. And Clifford, faintly smiling with a
half-teasing superiority, saying to her:
`You
must say j'adoube!'
She
looked up at him with bright, startled eyes, then
murmured shyly, obediently:
`J'adoube!'
Yes,
he was educating her. And he enjoyed it, it gave him a
sense of power. And she was thrilled. She was coming bit
by bit into possession of all that the gentry knew, all
that made them upper class: apart from the money. That
thrilled her. And at the same time, she was making him
want to have her there with him. It was a subtle deep
flattery to him, her genuine thrill.
To
Connie, Clifford seemed to be coming out in his true
colours: a little vulgar, a little common, and
uninspired; rather fat. Ivy Bolton's tricks and humble
bossiness were also only too transparent. But Connie did
wonder at the genuine thrill which the woman got out of
Clifford. To say she was in love with him would be
putting it wrongly. She was thrilled by her contact with
a man of the upper class, this titled gentleman, this
author who could write books and poems, and whose
photograph appeared in the illustrated newspapers. She
was thrilled to a weird passion. And his `educating' her
roused in her a passion of excitement and response much
deeper than any love affair could have done. In truth,
the very fact that there could be no love affair
left her free to thrill to her very marrow with this
other passion, the peculiar passion of knowing,
knowing as he knew.
There
was no mistake that the woman was in some way in love
with him: whatever force we give to the word love. She
looked so handsome and so young, and her grey eyes were
sometimes marvellous. At the same time, there was a
lurking soft satisfaction about her, even of triumph,
and private satisfaction. Ugh, that private
satisfaction. How Connie loathed it!
But
no wonder Clifford was caught by the woman! She
absolutely adored him, in her persistent fashion, and
put herself absolutely at his service, for him to use as
he liked. No wonder he was flattered!
Connie
heard long conversations going on between the two. Or
rather, it bas mostly Mrs Bolton talking. She had
unloosed to him the stream of gossip about Tevershall
village. It was more than gossip. It was Mrs Gaskell and
George Eliot and Miss Mitford all rolled in one, with a
great deal more, that these women left out.' Once
started, Mrs Bolton was better than any book, about the
lives of the people. She knew them all so intimately,
and had such a peculiar, flamey zest in all their
affairs, it was wonderful, if just a trifle
humiliating to listen to her. At first she had not
ventured to `talk Tevershall', as she called it, to
Clifford. But once started, it went on. Clifford was
listening for `material', and he found it in plenty.
Connie realized that his so-called genius was just this:
a perspicuous talent for personal gossip, clever and
apparently detached. Mrs Bolton, of course, was very
warm when she `talked Tevershall'. Carried away, in
fact. And it was marvellous, the things that happened
and that she knew about. She would have run to dozens of
volumes.
Connie
was fascinated, listening to her. But afterwards always
a little ashamed. She ought not to listen with this
queer rabid curiosity. After all, one may hear the most
private affairs of other people, but only in a spirit of
respect for the struggling, battered thing which any
human soul is, and in a spirit of fine, discriminative
sympathy. For even satire is a form of sympathy. It is
the way our sympathy flows and recoils that really
determines our lives. And here lies the vast importance
of the novel, properly handled. It can inform and lead
into new places the flow of our sympathetic
consciousness, and it can lead our sympathy away in
recoil from things gone dead. Therefore, the novel,
properly handled, can reveal the most secret places of
life: for it is in the passional secret places of
life, above all, that the tide of sensitive awareness
needs to ebb and flow, cleansing and freshening.
But
the novel, like gossip, can also excite spurious
sympathies and recoils, mechanical and deadening to the
psyche. The novel can glorify the most corrupt feelings,
so long as they are conventionally `pure'. Then
the novel, like gossip, becomes at last vicious, and,
like gossip, all the more vicious because it is always
ostensibly on the side of the angels. Mrs Bolton's
gossip was always on the side of the angels. `And he was
such a bad fellow, and she was such a nice
woman.' Whereas, as Connie could see even from Mrs
Bolton's gossip, the woman had been merely a
mealy-mouthed sort, and the man angrily honest. But
angry honesty made a `bad man' of him, and mealy-mouthedness
made a `nice woman' of her, in the vicious, conventional
channelling of sympathy by Mrs Bolton.
For
this reason, the gossip was humiliating. And for the
same reason, most novels, especially popular ones, are
humiliating too. The public responds now only to an
appeal to its vices.
Nevertheless,
one got a new vision of Tevershall village from Mrs
Bolton's talk. A terrible, seething welter of ugly life
it seemed: not at all the flat drabness it looked from
outside. Clifford of course knew by sight most of the
people mentioned, Connie knew only one or two. But it
sounded really more like a Central African jungle than
an English village.
`I
suppose you heard as Miss Allsopp was married last week!
Would you ever! Miss Allsopp, old James' daughter, the
boot-and-shoe Allsopp. You know they built a house up at
Pye Croft. The old man died last year from a fall;
eighty-three, he was, an' nimble as a lad. An' then he
slipped on Bestwood Hill, on a slide as the lads 'ad
made last winter, an' broke his thigh, and that finished
him, poor old man, it did seem a shame. Well, he left
all his money to Tattie: didn't leave the boys a penny.
An' Tattie, I know, is five years---yes, she's
fifty-three last autumn. And you know they were such
Chapel people, my word! She taught Sunday school for
thirty years, till her father died. And then she started
carrying on with a fellow from Kinbrook, I don't know if
you know him, an oldish fellow with a red nose, rather
dandified, Willcock, as works in Harrison's woodyard.
Well he's sixty-five, if he's a day, yet you'd have
thought they were a pair of young turtle-doves, to see
them, arm in arm, and kissing at the gate: yes, an' she
sitting on his knee right in the bay window on Pye Croft
Road, for anybody to see. And he's got sons over forty:
only lost his wife two years ago. If old James Allsopp
hasn't risen from his grave, it's because there is no
rising: for he kept her that strict! Now they're married
and gone to live down at Kinbrook, and they say she goes
round in a dressing-gown from morning to night, a
veritable sight. I'm sure it's awful, the way the old
ones go on! Why they're a lot worse than the young, and
a sight more disgusting. I lay it down to the pictures,
myself. But you can't keep them away. I was always
saying: go to a good instructive film, but do for
goodness sake keep away from these melodramas and love
films. Anyhow keep the children away! But there you are,
grown-ups are worse than the children: and the old ones
beat the band. Talk about morality! Nobody cares a
thing. Folks does as they like, and much better off they
are for it, I must say. But they're having to draw their
horns in nowadays, now th' pits are working so bad, and
they haven't got the money. And the grumbling they do,
it's awful, especially the women. The men are so good
and patient! What can they do, poor chaps! But the
women, oh, they do carry on! They go and show off,
giving contributions for a wedding present for Princess
Mary, and then when they see all the grand things that's
been given, they simply rave: who's she, any better than
anybody else! Why doesn't Swan & Edgar give me one
fur coat, instead of giving her six. I wish I'd kept my
ten shillings! What's she going to give me, I should
like to know? Here I can't get a new spring coat, my
dad's working that bad, and she gets van-loads. It's
time as poor folks had some money to spend, rich ones
'as 'ad it long enough. I want a new spring coat, I do,
an' wheer am I going to get it? I say to them, be
thankful you're well fed and well clothed, without all
the new finery you want! And they fly back at me:
"Why isn't Princess Mary thankful to go about in
her old rags, then, an' have nothing! Folks like her
get van-loads, an' I can't have a new spring coat. It's
a damned shame. Princess! Bloomin' rot about Princess!
It's munney as matters, an' cos she's got lots, they
give her more! Nobody's givin' me any, an' I've as much
right as anybody else. Don't talk to me about education.
It's munney as matters. I want a new spring coat, I do,
an' I shan't get it, cos there's no munney..."
That's all they care about, clothes. They think nothing
of giving seven or eight guineas for a winter
coat---colliers' daughters, mind you---and two guineas
for a child's summer hat. And then they go to the
Primitive Chapel in their two-guinea hat, girls as would
have been proud of a three-and-sixpenny one in my day. I
heard that at the Primitive Methodist anniversary this
year, when they have a built-up platform for the Sunday
School children, like a grandstand going almost up to th'
ceiling, I heard Miss Thompson, who has the first class
of girls in the Sunday School, say there'd be over a
thousand pounds in new Sunday clothes sitting on that
platform! And times are what they are! But you can't
stop them. They're mad for clothes. And boys the same.
The lads spend every penny on themselves, clothes,
smoking, drinking in the Miners' Welfare, jaunting off
to Sheffield two or three times a week. Why, it's
another world. And they fear nothing, and they respect
nothing, the young don't. The older men are that patient
and good, really, they let the women take everything.
And this is what it leads to. The women are positive
demons. But the lads aren't like their dads. They're
sacrificing nothing, they aren't: they're all for self.
If you tell them they ought to be putting a bit by, for
a home, they say: That'll keep, that will, I'm goin' t'
enjoy myself while I can. Owt else'll keep! Oh, they're
rough an' selfish, if you like. Everything falls on the
older men, an' it's a bad outlook all round.'
Clifford
began to get a new idea of his own village. The place
had always frightened him, but he had thought it more or
less stable. Now---?
`Is
there much Socialism, Bolshevism, among the people?' he
asked.
`Oh!'
said Mrs Bolton, `you hear a few loud-mouthed ones. But
they're mostly women who've got into debt. The men take
no notice. I don't believe you'll ever turn our
Tevershall men into reds. They're too decent for that.
But the young ones blether sometimes. Not that they care
for it really. They only want a bit of money in their
pocket, to spend at the Welfare, or go gadding to
Sheffield. That's all they care. When they've got no
money, they'll listen to the reds spouting. But nobody
believes in it, really.'
`So
you think there's no danger?'
`Oh
no! Not if trade was good, there wouldn't be. But if
things were bad for a long spell, the young ones might
go funny. I tell you, they're a selfish, spoilt lot. But
I don't see how they'd ever do anything. They aren't
ever serious about anything, except showing off on
motor-bikes and dancing at the Palais-de-danse in
Sheffield. You can't make them serious. The
serious ones dress up in evening clothes and go off to
the Pally to show off before a lot of girls and dance
these new Charlestons and what not. I'm sure sometimes
the bus'll be full of young fellows in evening suits,
collier lads, off to the Pally: let alone those that
have gone with their girls in motors or on motor-bikes.
They don't give a serious thought to a thing---save
Doncaster races, and the Derby: for they all of them bet
on every race. And football! But even football's not
what it was, not by a long chalk. It's too much like
hard work, they say. No, they'd rather be off on
motor-bikes to Sheffield or Nottingham, Saturday
afternoons.'
`But
what do they do when they get there?'
`Oh,
hang around---and have tea in some fine tea-place like
the Mikado---and go to the Pally or the pictures or the
Empire, with some girl. The girls are as free as the
lads. They do just what they like.'
`And
what do they do when they haven't the money for these
things?'
`They
seem to get it, somehow. And they begin talking nasty
then. But I don't see how you're going to get
bolshevism, when all the lads want is just money to
enjoy themselves, and the girls the same, with fine
clothes: and they don't care about another thing. They
haven't the brains to be socialists. They haven't enough
seriousness to take anything really serious, and they
never will have.'
Connie
thought, how extremely like all the rest of the classes
the lower classes sounded. Just the same thing over
again, Tevershall or Mayfair or Kensington. There was
only one class nowadays: moneyboys. The moneyboy and the
moneygirl, the only difference was how much you'd got,
and how much you wanted.
Under
Mrs Bolton's influence, Clifford began to take a new
interest in the mines. He began to feel he belonged. A
new sort of self-assertion came into him. After all, he
was the real boss in Tevershall, he was really the pits.
It was a new sense of power, something he had till now
shrunk from with dread.
Tevershall
pits were running thin. There were only two collieries:
Tevershall itself, and New London. Tevershall had once
been a famous mine, and had made famous money. But its
best days were over. New London was never very rich, and
in ordinary times just got along decently. But now times
were bad, and it was pits like New London that got left.
`There's
a lot of Tevershall men left and gone to Stacks Gate and
Whiteover,' said Mrs Bolton. `You've not seen the new
works at Stacks Gate, opened after the war, have you,
Sir Clifford? Oh, you must go one day, they're something
quite new: great big chemical works at the pit-head,
doesn't look a bit like a colliery. They say they get
more money out of the chemical by-products than out of
the coal---I forget what it is. And the grand new houses
for the men, fair mansions! of course it's brought a lot
of riff-raff from all over the country. But a lot of
Tevershall men got on there, and doin' well, a lot
better than our own men. They say Tevershall's done,
finished: only a question of a few more years, and it'll
have to shut down. And New London'll go first. My word,
won't it be funny when there's no Tevershall pit
working. It's bad enough during a strike, but my word,
if it closes for good, it'll be like the end of the
world. Even when I was a girl it was the best pit in the
country, and a man counted himself lucky if he could on
here. Oh, there's been some money made in Tevershall.
And now the men say it's a sinking ship, and it's time
they all got out. Doesn't it sound awful! But of course
there's a lot as'll never go till they have to. They
don't like these new fangled mines, such a depth, and
all machinery to work them. Some of them simply dreads
those iron men, as they call them, those machines for
hewing the coal, where men always did it before. And
they say it's wasteful as well. But what goes in waste
is saved in wages, and a lot more. It seems soon
there'll be no use for men on the face of the earth,
it'll be all machines. But they say that's what folks
said when they had to give up the old stocking frames. I
can remember one or two. But my word, the more machines,
the more people, that's what it looks like! They say you
can't get the same chemicals out of Tevershall coal as
you can out of Stacks Gate, and that's funny, they're
not three miles apart. But they say so. But everybody
says it's a shame something can't be started, to keep
the men going a bit better, and employ the girls. All
the girls traipsing off to Sheffield every day! My word,
it would be something to talk about if Tevershall
Collieries took a new lease of life, after everybody
saying they're finished, and a sinking ship, and the men
ought to leave them like rats leave a sinking ship. But
folks talk so much, of course there was a boom during
the war. When Sir Geoffrey made a trust of himself and
got the money safe for ever, somehow. So they say! But
they say even the masters and the owners don't get much
out of it now. You can hardly believe it, can you! Why I
always thought the pits would go on for ever and ever.
Who'd have thought, when I was a girl! But New England's
shut down, so is Colwick Wood: yes, it's fair haunting
to go through that coppy and see Colwick Wood standing
there deserted among the trees, and bushes growing up
all over the pit-head, and the lines red rusty. It's
like death itself, a dead colliery. Why, whatever should
we do if Tevershall shut down---? It doesn't bear
thinking of. Always that throng it's been, except at
strikes, and even then the fan-wheels didn't stand,
except when they fetched the ponies up. I'm sure it's a
funny world, you don't know where you are from year to
year, you really don't.'
It
was Mrs Bolton's talk that really put a new fight into
Clifford. His income, as she pointed out to him, was
secure, from his father's trust, even though it was not
large. The pits did not really concern him. It was the
other world he wanted to capture, the world of
literature and fame; the popular world, not the working
world.
Now
he realized the distinction between popular success and
working success: the populace of pleasure and the
populace of work. He, as a private individual, had been
catering with his stories for the populace of pleasure.
And he had caught on. But beneath the populace of
pleasure lay the populace of work, grim, grimy, and
rather terrible. They too had to have their providers.
And it was a much grimmer business, providing for the
populace of work, than for the populace of pleasure.
While he was doing his stories, and `getting on' in the
world, Tevershall was going to the wall.
He
realized now that the bitch-goddess of Success had two
main appetites: one for flattery, adulation, stroking
and tickling such as writers and artists gave her; but
the other a grimmer appetite for meat and bones. And the
meat and bones for the bitch-goddess were provided by
the men who made money in industry.
Yes,
there were two great groups of dogs wrangling for the
bitch-goddess: the group of the flatterers, those who
offered her amusement, stories, films, plays: and the
other, much less showy, much more savage breed, those
who gave her meat, the real substance of money. The
well-groomed showy dogs of amusement wrangled and
snarled among themselves for the favours of the
bitch-goddess. But it was nothing to the silent
fight-to-the-death that went on among the
indispensables, the bone-bringers.
But
under Mrs Bolton's influence, Clifford was tempted to
enter this other fight, to capture the bitch-goddess by
brute means of industrial production. Somehow, he got
his pecker up.
In
one way, Mrs Bolton made a man of him, as Connie never
did. Connie kept him apart, and made him sensitive and
conscious of himself and his own states. Mrs Bolton made
hint aware only of outside things. Inwardly he began to
go soft as pulp. But outwardly he began to be effective.
He
even roused himself to go to the mines once more: and
when he was there, he went down in a tub, and in a tub
he was hauled out into the workings. Things he had
learned before the war, and seemed utterly to have
forgotten, now came back to him. He sat there, crippled,
in a tub, with the underground manager showing him the
seam with a powerful torch. And he said little. But his
mind began to work.
He
began to read again his technical works on the
coal-mining industry, he studied the government reports,
and he read with care the latest things on mining and
the chemistry of coal and of shale which were written in
German. Of course the most valuable discoveries were
kept secret as far as possible. But once you started a
sort of research in the field of coal-mining, a study of
methods and means, a study of by-products and the
chemical possibilities of coal, it was astounding the
ingenuity and the almost uncanny cleverness of the
modern technical mind, as if really the devil himself
had lent fiend's wits to the technical scientists of
industry. It was far more interesting than art, than
literature, poor emotional half-witted stuff, was this
technical science of industry. In this field, men were
like gods, or demons, inspired to discoveries, and
fighting to carry them out. In this activity, men were
beyond atty mental age calculable. But Clifford knew
that when it did come to the emotional and human life,
these self-made men were of a mental age of about
thirteen, feeble boys. The discrepancy was enormous and
appalling.
But
let that be. Let man slide down to general idiocy in the
emotional and `human' mind, Clifford did not care. Let
all that go hang. He was interested in the
technicalities of modern coal-mining, and in pulling
Tevershall out of the hole.
He
went down to the pit day after day, he studied, he put
the general manager, and the overhead manager, and the
underground manager, and the engineers through a mill
they had never dreamed of. Power! He felt a new sense of
power flowing through him: power over all these men,
over the hundreds and hundreds of colliers. He was
finding out: and he was getting things into his grip.
And
he seemed verily to be re-born. Now life came
into him! He had been gradually dying, with Connie, in
the isolated private life of the artist and the
conscious being. Now let all that go. Let it sleep. He
simply felt life rush into him out of the coal, out of
the pit. The very stale air of the colliery was better
than oxygen to him. It gave him a sense of power, power.
He was doing something: and he was going to do
something. He was going to win, to win: not as he had
won with his stories, mere publicity, amid a whole
sapping of energy and malice. But a man's victory.
At
first he thought the solution lay in electricity:
convert the coal into electric power. Then a new idea
came. The Germans invented a new locomotive engine with
a self feeder, that did not need a fireman. And it was
to be fed with a new fuel, that burnt in small
quantities at a great heat, under peculiar conditions.
The
idea of a new concentrated fuel that burnt with a hard
slowness at a fierce heat was what first attracted
Clifford. There must be some sort of external stimulus
of the burning of such fuel, not merely air supply. He
began to experiment, and got a clever young fellow, who
had proved brilliant in chemistry, to help him.
And
he felt triumphant. He had at last got out of himself.
He had fulfilled his life-long secret yearning to get
out of himself. Art had not done it for him. Art had
only made it worse. But now, now he had done it.
He
was not aware how much Mrs Bolton was behind him. He did
not know how much he depended on her. But for all that,
it was evident that when he was with her his voice
dropped to an easy rhythm of intimacy, almost a trifle
vulgar.
With
Connie, he was a little stiff. He felt he owed her
everything, and he showed her the utmost respect and
consideration, so long as she gave him mere outward
respect. But it was obvious he had a secret dread of
her. The new Achilles in hint had a heel, and in this
heel the woman, the woman like Connie, his wife, could
lame him fatally. He went in a certain half-subservient
dread of her, and was extremely nice to her. But his
voice was a little tense when he spoke to her, and he
began to be silent whenever she was present.
Only
when he was alone with Mrs Bolton did he really feel a
lord and a master, and his voice ran on with her almost
as easily and garrulously as her own could run. And he
let her shave him or sponge all his body as if he were a
child, really as if he were a child. |