It was on a cold and drenching afternoon
in October that I spent an hour at Woon Gate:
for in all the homeless landscape this little round-house
offers the only shelter, its windows looking east and
west along the high-road and abroad upon miles of
moorland, hedgeless, dotted with peat-ricks, inhabited
only by flocks of grey geese and a declining breed
of ponies, the chartered vagrants of Woon Down.
Two miles and more to the north, and just under the
rim of the horizon, straggle the cottages of a few
tin-streamers, with their backs to the wind.
These look down across an arable country, into which
the women descend to work at seed-time and harvest,
and whence, returning, they bring some news of the
world. But Woon Gate lies remoter. It was
never more than a turnpike; and now the gate is down,
the toll-keeper dead, and his widow lives alone in
the round-house. She opened the door to me - a
pleasant-faced old woman of seventy, in a muslin cap,
red turnover, and grey gown hitched very high.
She wore no shoes inside her cottage, but went about
in a pair of coarse worsted stockings on all days
except the very rawest, when the chill of the lime-ash
floor struck into her bones.
“May I wait a few minutes till
the weather lifts?” I asked.
She smiled and seemed almost grateful.
“You’m kindly welcome,
be sure: that’s if you don’t mind
the Vaccination.”
I suppose that my face expressed some wonder: for she
went on, shaking my dripping hat and hanging it on a nail by the fire -
“Doctor Rodda’ll be comin’
in half-an-hour’s time. ’Tis district
Vaccination to-day, and he always inoculates here,
’tis so handy.”
She nodded her head at half a dozen
deal chairs and a form arrayed round the wall under
a row of sacred texts and tradesmen’s almanacks.
“There’ll be nine to-day,
as I makes it out. I counted ’em up several
times last night.”
It was evidently a great day in her eyes.
“But you’ve allowed room for many more
than nine,” I pointed out.
“Why, of course. There’s
some brings their elder childer for a treat - an’
there’s always ’Melia Penaluna.”
I was on the point of asking who Amelia
Penaluna might be, when my attention was drawn to
the small eastern window. Just outside, and but
a dozen paces from the house, there stretched a sullen
pond, over which the wind drove in scuds and whipped
the sparse reeds that encroached around its margin.
Beside the further bank of the pond the high-road
was joined by a narrow causeway that led down from
the northern fringe of Woon Down; and along this causeway
moved a procession of women and children.
They were about twenty in all, and,
as they skirted the pond, their figures were sharply
silhouetted against the grey sky. Each of the
women held a baby close to her breast and bent over
it as she advanced against the wind, that beat her
gown tightly against her legs and blew it out behind
in bellying folds. Yet beneath their uncouth and
bedraggled garments they moved like mothers of a mighty
race, tall, large-limbed, broad of hip, hiding generous
breasts beneath the shawls - red, grey, and
black - that covered their babes from the
wind and rain. A few of the children struggled
forward under ricketty umbrellas; but the mothers
had their hands full, and strode along unsheltered.
More than one, indeed, faced the storm without bonnet
or covering for the head; and all marched along the
causeway like figures on some sculptured frieze, their
shadows broken beneath them on the ruffled surface
of the pond. I said that each of the women carried
a babe: but there was one who did not - a
plain, squat creature, at the tail of the procession,
who wore a thick scarf round her neck, and a shawl
of divers bright colours. She led a small child
along with one hand, and with the other attempted
to keep a large umbrella against the wind.
“Nineteen - twenty - twenty-one,”
counted the toll-keeper’s widow behind me as
I watched the spasmodic jerkings of this umbrella.
“I wasn’t far out in my reckon. And
you, sir, make twenty-two. It niver rains but
it pours, they say. Times enow I don’t
see a soul for days together, not to hail by name,
an’ now you drops in on top of a Vaccination.”
Her sigh over this plethora of good
fortune was interrupted by a knocking at the door,
and the mothers trooped in, their clothes dripping
pools of water on the sanded lime-ash. One or
two of them, after exchanging greetings with their
hostess, bade me Good-morning: others eyed me
in silence as they took their seats round the wall.
All whose babes were not sound asleep quietly undid
their bodices and began to give them suck. The
older children scrambled into chairs and sat kicking
their heels and tracing patterns on the floor with
the water that ran off their umbrellas. They
were restless but rather silent, as if awed by the
shadow of the coming Vaccination. The woman who
had brought up the procession, found a place in the
far corner, and began to unwind the comforter around
her neck. Her eyes were brighter and more agitated
than any in the room.
“A brave trapse all the way
from Upper Woon,” remarked the youngest mother,
wiping a smear of rain from her baby’s forehead.
“Ah, ’tis your first,
Mary Polsue. Wait till you’ve carried twelve
such loads, my dear,” said a tall middle-aged
woman, whose black hair, coarse as a mane, was powdered
grey with, raindrops.
“Dear now, Ellen; be this the
twelfth?” our hostess exclaimed. “I
was reckonin’ it the ’leventh.”
“Ay, th’ twelfth - tho’
I’ve most lost count. I buried one, you
know.”
“For my part,” put in
a pale-eyed blonde, who sat near the door, “’t
seems but yestiddy I was here with Alsia yonder.”
She nodded her head towards a girl of five who was
screwing herself round in her chair and trying to
peep out of the window.
“Ay, they come and come:
the Lord knows wherefore,” the tall woman assented.
“When they’m young they make your arms
ache, an’ when they grow up they make your heart
ache.”
“But ’Melia Penaluna’s
been here more times than any of us,” said the
blonde with a titter, directing her eyes towards a
corner of the room. The rest looked too, and
laughed. Turning, I saw that the plain-faced
woman had unwound her comforter, and now I could see,
hanging low on her chest, an immense lump wrapped
in clean white linen and bound up with a gaudy yellow
handkerchief. It was a goitre.
“Iss, my dears,” she answered,
touching it and smiling, but with tears in her eyes;
“this here’s my only child, an’ iver
will be. Ne’er a man’ll look ‘pon
me, so I’m forced to be content wi’ this
babe and clothe ’en pretty, as you see.
Ah, you’m lucky, you’m lucky, though you
talk so!”
“She’s terrible fond o’
childer,” said one of the women audibly, addressing
me. “How many ’noculations have you
’tended, ’Melia?”
“Six-an’-twenty, countin’
to-day,” ’Melia announced with pride in
her trembling voice. But at this point one of
the infants began to cry, and before he could be hushed
the noise of wheels sounded down the road, and Dr.
Rodda drove up in his reedy gig.
He was a round, dapper practitioner,
with slightly soiled cuffs and an extremely business-like
manner. On entering the room he jerked his head
in a general nod to all present, and stepping to the
table, drew a small packet from his waistcoat, and
unfolded it. It contained about a score of small
pieces of ivory, pointed like pens, but flat.
Then, pulling out a paper and consulting it hastily,
he set to work, beginning with the child that lay
on the blonde woman’s lap, next to the door.
I looked around. The children
were staring with wide, admiring eyes. Their
mothers also watched, but listlessly, still suckling
their babes as each waited its turn. Only ’Melia
Penaluna winced and squeezed her hands together whenever
a feeble wailing told that one of the vaccine points
had made itself felt.
“Do ’ee think it hurts
the poor mites?” the youngest mother asked.
“Not much, I reckon,” answered the big
woman.
Nevertheless her own child cried pitifully
when its turn came. And as it cried, the childless
woman in the corner got off her chair and ran forward
tremulously.
“’Becca, let me take him. Do’ee,
co!”
“’Melia Penaluna, you’m no better
’n a fool.”
But poor, misnamed Amelia was already
back in her corner with the child, hugging it, kissing
it, rocking it in her arms, crooning over it, holding
it tightly against the lump that hung down on her barren
bosom. Long after the baby had ceased to cry she
sat crooning and yearning over it. And the mothers
watched her, with wonder and scornful amusement in
their eyes.