Of course Alvina made everybody pay
for her mood of submission and sweetness. In
a month’s time she was quite intolerable.
“I can’t stay here all
my life,” she declared, stretching her eyes
in a way that irritated the other inmates of Manchester
House extremely. “I know I can’t.
I can’t bear it. I simply can’t bear
it, and there’s an end of it. I can’t,
I tell you. I can’t bear it. I’m
buried alive simply buried alive. And
it’s more than I can stand. It is, really.”
There was an odd clang, like a taunt,
in her voice. She was trying them all.
“But what do you want, dear?”
asked Miss Frost, knitting her dark brows in agitation.
“I want to go away,” said Alvina bluntly.
Miss Frost gave a slight gesture with
her right hand, of helpless impatience. It was
so characteristic, that Alvina almost laughed.
“But where do you want to go?” asked Miss
Frost.
“I don’t know. I
don’t care,” said Alvina. “Anywhere,
if I can get out of Woodhouse.”
“Do you wish you had gone to
Australia?” put in Miss Pinnegar.
“No, I don’t wish I had
gone to Australia,” retorted Alvina with a rude
laugh. “Australia isn’t the only other
place besides Woodhouse.”
Miss Pinnegar was naturally offended.
But the curious insolence which sometimes came out
in the girl was inherited direct from her father.
“You see, dear,” said
Miss Frost, agitated: “if you knew what
you wanted, it would be easier to see the way.”
“I want to be a nurse,” rapped out Alvina.
Miss Frost stood still, with the stillness
of a middle-aged disapproving woman, and looked at
her charge. She believed that Alvina was just
speaking at random. Yet she dared not check her,
in her present mood.
Alvina was indeed speaking at random.
She had never thought of being a nurse the
idea had never entered her head. If it had she
would certainly never have entertained it. But
she had heard Alexander speak of Nurse This and Sister
That. And so she had rapped out her declaration.
And having rapped it out, she prepared herself to stick
to it. Nothing like leaping before you look.
“A nurse!” repeated Miss
Frost. “But do you feel yourself fitted
to be a nurse? Do you think you could bear it?”
“Yes, I’m sure I could,”
retorted Alvina. “I want to be a maternity
nurse ” She looked strangely, even
outrageously, at her governess. “I want
to be a maternity nurse. Then I shouldn’t
have to attend operations.” And she laughed
quickly.
Miss Frost’s right hand beat
like a wounded bird. It was reminiscent of the
way she beat time, insistently, when she was giving
music lessons, sitting close beside her pupils at
the piano. Now it beat without time or reason.
Alvina smiled brightly and cruelly.
“Whatever put such an idea into
your head, Vina?” asked poor Miss Frost.
“I don’t know,”
said Alvina, still more archly and brightly.
“Of course you don’t mean
it, dear,” said Miss Frost, quailing.
“Yes, I do. Why should I say it if I don’t.”
Miss Frost would have done anything
to escape the arch, bright, cruel eyes of her charge.
“Then we must think about it,”
she said, numbly. And she went away.
Alvina floated off to her room, and
sat by the window looking down on the street.
The bright, arch look was still on her face. But
her heart was sore. She wanted to cry, and fling
herself on the breast of her darling. But she
couldn’t. No, for her life she couldn’t.
Some little devil sat in her breast and kept her smiling
archly.
Somewhat to her amazement, he sat
steadily on for days and days. Every minute she
expected him to go. Every minute she expected
to break down, to burst into tears and tenderness
and reconciliation. But no she did
not break down. She persisted. They all waited
for the old loving Vina to be herself again.
But the new and recalcitrant Vina still shone hard.
She found a copy of The Lancet, and saw an
advertisement of a home in Islington where maternity
nurses would be fully trained and equipped in six months’
time. The fee was sixty guineas. Alvina declared
her intention of departing to this training home.
She had two hundred pounds of her own, bequeathed
by her grandfather.
In Manchester House they were all
horrified not moved with grief, this time,
but shocked. It seemed such a repulsive and indelicate
step to take. Which it was. And which, in
her curious perverseness, Alvina must have intended
it to be. Mrs. Houghton assumed a remote air
of silence, as if she did not hear any more, did not
belong. She lapsed far away. She was really
very weak. Miss Pinnegar said: “Well
really, if she wants to do it, why, she might as well
try.” And, as often with Miss Pinnegar,
this speech seemed to contain a veiled threat.
“A maternity nurse!” said
James Houghton. “A maternity nurse!
What exactly do you mean by a maternity nurse?”
“A trained mid-wife,”
said Miss Pinnegar curtly. “That’s
it, isn’t it? It is as far as I can see.
A trained mid-wife.”
“Yes, of course,” said Alvina brightly.
“But !” stammered
James Houghton, pushing his spectacles up on to his
forehead, and making his long fleece of painfully thin
hair uncover his baldness. “I can’t
understand that any young girl of any any
upbringing, any upbringing whatever, should want to
choose such a such an occupation.
I can’t understand it.”
“Can’t you?” said Alvina brightly.
“Oh well, if she does ”
said Miss Pinnegar cryptically.
Miss Frost said very little.
But she had serious confidential talks with Dr. Fordham.
Dr. Fordham didn’t approve, certainly he didn’t but
neither did he see any great harm in it. At that
time it was rather the thing for young ladies to enter
the nursing profession, if their hopes had been blighted
or checked in another direction! And so, enquiries
were made. Enquiries were made.
The upshot was, that Alvina was to
go to Islington for her six months’ training.
There was a great bustle, preparing her nursing outfit.
Instead of a trousseau, nurse’s uniforms in fine
blue-and-white stripe, with great white aprons.
Instead of a wreath of orange blossom, a rather chic
nurse’s bonnet of blue silk, and for a trailing
veil, a blue silk fall.
Well and good! Alvina expected
to become frightened, as the time drew near.
But no, she wasn’t a bit frightened. Miss
Frost watched her narrowly. Would there not be
a return of the old, tender, sensitive, shrinking
Vina the exquisitely sensitive and nervous,
loving girl? No, astounding as it may seem, there
was no return of such a creature. Alvina remained
bright and ready, the half-hilarious clang remained
in her voice, taunting. She kissed them all good-bye,
brightly and sprightlily, and off she set. She
wasn’t nervous.
She came to St. Pancras, she got her
cab, she drove off to her destination and
as she drove, she looked out of the window. Horrid,
vast, stony, dilapidated, crumbly-stuccoed streets
and squares of Islington, grey, grey, greyer by far
than Woodhouse, and interminable. How exceedingly
sordid and disgusting! But instead of being repelled
and heartbroken, Alvina enjoyed it. She felt her
trunk rumble on the top of the cab, and still she looked
out on the ghastly dilapidated flat façades of Islington,
and still she smiled brightly, as if there were some
charm in it all. Perhaps for her there was a
charm in it all. Perhaps it acted like a tonic
on the little devil in her breast. Perhaps if
she had seen tufts of snowdrops it was
February and yew-hedges and cottage windows,
she would have broken down. As it was, she just
enjoyed it. She enjoyed glimpsing in through
uncurtained windows, into sordid rooms where human
beings moved as if sordidly unaware. She enjoyed
the smell of a toasted bloater, rather burnt.
So common! so indescribably common! And she detested
bloaters, because of the hairy feel of the spines
in her mouth. But to smell them like this, to
know that she was in the region of “penny beef-steaks,”
gave her a perverse pleasure.
The cab stopped at a yellow house
at the corner of a square where some shabby bare trees
were flecked with bits of blown paper, bits of paper
and refuse cluttered inside the round railings of each
tree. She went up some dirty-yellowish steps,
and rang the “Patients’” bell, because
she knew she ought not to ring the “Tradesmen’s.”
A servant, not exactly dirty, but unattractive, let
her into a hall painted a dull drab, and floored with
cocoa-matting, otherwise bare. Then up bare stairs
to a room where a stout, pale, common woman with two
warts on her face, was drinking tea. It was three
o’clock. This was the matron. The matron
soon deposited her in a bedroom, not very small, but
bare and hard and dusty-seeming, and there left her.
Alvina sat down on her chair, looked at her box opposite
her, looked round the uninviting room, and smiled to
herself. Then she rose and went to the window:
a very dirty window, looking down into a sort of well
of an area, with other wells ranging along, and straight
opposite like a reflection another solid range of
back-premises, with iron stair-ways and horrid little
doors and washing and little W. C.’s and people
creeping up and down like vermin. Alvina shivered
a little, but still smiled. Then slowly she began
to take off her hat. She put it down on the drab-painted
chest of drawers.
Presently the servant came in with
a tray, set it down, lit a naked gas-jet, which roared
faintly, and drew down a crackly dark-green blind,
which showed a tendency to fly back again alertly to
the ceiling.
“Thank you,” said Alvina, and the girl
departed.
Then Miss Houghton drank her black
tea and ate her bread and margarine.
Surely enough books have been written
about heroines in similar circumstances. There
is no need to go into the details of Alvina’s
six months in Islington.
The food was objectionable yet
Alvina got fat on it. The air was filthy and
yet never had her colour been so warm and fresh, her
skin so soft. Her companions were almost without
exception vulgar and coarse yet never had
she got on so well with women of her own age or
older than herself. She was ready with a laugh
and a word, and though she was unable to venture on
indecencies herself, yet she had an amazing faculty
for looking knowing and indecent beyond words,
rolling her eyes and pitching her eyebrows in a certain
way oh, it was quite sufficient for her
companions! And yet, if they had ever actually
demanded a dirty story or a really open indecency
from her, she would have been floored.
But she enjoyed it. Amazing how
she enjoyed it. She did not care how revolting
and indecent these nurses were she put on
a look as if she were in with it all, and it all passed
off as easy as winking. She swung her haunches
and arched her eyes with the best of them. And
they behaved as if she were exactly one of themselves.
And yet, with the curious cold tact of women, they
left her alone, one and all, in private: just
ignored her.
It is truly incredible how Alvina
became blooming and bouncing at this time. Nothing
shocked her, nothing upset her. She was always
ready with her hard, nurse’s laugh and her nurse’s
quips. No one was better than she at double-entendres.
No one could better give the nurse’s leer.
She had it all in a fortnight. And never once
did she feel anything but exhilarated and in full
swing. It seemed to her she had not a moment’s
time to brood or reflect about things she
was too much in the swing. Every moment, in the
swing, living, or active in full swing. When
she got into bed she went to sleep. When she
awoke, it was morning, and she got up. As soon
as she was up and dressed she had somebody to answer,
something to say, something to do. Time passed
like an express train and she seemed to
have known no other life than this.
Not far away was a lying-in hospital.
A dreadful place it was. There she had to go,
right off, and help with cases. There she had
to attend lectures and demonstrations. There
she met the doctors and students. Well, a pretty
lot they were, one way and another. When she
had put on flesh and become pink and bouncing she was
just their sort: just their very ticket.
Her voice had the right twang, her eyes the right
roll, her haunches the right swing. She seemed
altogether just the ticket. And yet she wasn’t.
It would be useless to say she was
not shocked. She was profoundly and awfully shocked.
Her whole state was perhaps largely the result of
shock: a sort of play-acting based on hysteria.
But the dreadful things she saw in the lying-in hospital,
and afterwards, went deep, and finished her youth
and her tutelage for ever. How many infernos
deeper than Miss Frost could ever know, did she not
travel? the inferno of the human animal, the human
organism in its convulsions, the human social beast
in its abjection and its degradation.
For in her latter half she had to
visit the slum cases. And such cases! A
woman lying on a bare, filthy floor, a few old coats
thrown over her, and vermin crawling everywhere, in
spite of sanitary inspectors. But what did the
woman, the sufferer, herself care! She ground
her teeth and screamed and yelled with pains.
In her calm periods she lay stupid and indifferent or
she cursed a little. But abject, stupid indifference
was the bottom of it all: abject, brutal indifference
to everything yes, everything. Just
a piece of female functioning, no more.
Alvina was supposed to receive a certain
fee for these cases she attended in their homes.
A small proportion of her fee she kept for herself,
the rest she handed over to the Home. That was
the agreement. She received her grudged fee callously,
threatened and exacted it when it was not forthcoming.
Ha! if they didn’t have to pay you
at all, these slum-people, they would treat you with
more contempt than if you were one of themselves.
It was one of the hardest lessons Alvina had to learn to
bully these people, in their own hovels, into some
sort of obedience to her commands, and some sort of
respect for her presence. She had to fight tooth
and nail for this end. And in a week she was
as hard and callous to them as they to her. And
so her work was well done. She did not hate them.
There they were. They had a certain life, and
you had to take them at their own worth in their own
way. What else! If one should be gentle,
one was gentle. The difficulty did not lie there.
The difficulty lay in being sufficiently rough and
hard: that was the trouble. It cost a great
struggle to be hard and callous enough. Glad
she would have been to be allowed to treat them quietly
and gently, with consideration. But pah it
was not their line. They wanted to be callous,
and if you were not callous to match, they made a
fool of you and prevented your doing your work.
Was Alvina her own real self all this
time? The mighty question arises upon us, what
is one’s own real self? It certainly is
not what we think we are and ought to be. Alvina
had been bred to think of herself as a delicate, tender,
chaste creature with unselfish inclinations and a
pure, “high” mind. Well, so she was,
in the more-or-less exhausted part of herself.
But high-mindedness had really come to an end with
James Houghton, had really reached the point, not
only of pathetic, but of dry and anti-human, repulsive
quixotry. In Alvina high-mindedness was already
stretched beyond the breaking point. Being a
woman of some flexibility of temper, wrought through
generations to a fine, pliant hardness, she flew back.
She went right back on high-mindedness. Did she
thereby betray it?
We think not. If we turn over
the head of the penny and look at the tail, we don’t
thereby deny or betray the head. We do but adjust
it to its own complement. And so with high-mindedness.
It is but one side of the medal the crowned
reverse. On the obverse the three legs still
go kicking the soft-footed spin of the universe, the
dolphin flirts and the crab leers.
So Alvina spun her medal, and her
medal came down tails. Heads or tails? Heads
for generations. Then tails. See the poetic
justice.
Now Alvina decided to accept the decision
of her fate. Or rather, being sufficiently a
woman, she didn’t decide anything. She was
her own fate. She went through her training experiences
like another being. She was not herself, said
Everybody. When she came home to Woodhouse at
Easter, in her bonnet and cloak, everybody was simply
knocked out. Imagine that this frail, pallid,
diffident girl, so ladylike, was now a rather fat,
warm-coloured young woman, strapping and strong-looking,
and with a certain bounce. Imagine her mother’s
startled, almost expiring:
“Why, Vina dear!”
Vina laughed. She knew how they were all feeling.
“At least it agrees with your
health,” said her father, sarcastically,
to which Miss Pinnegar answered:
“Well, that’s a good deal.”
But Miss Frost said nothing the first
day. Only the second day, at breakfast, as Alvina
ate rather rapidly and rather well, the white-haired
woman said quietly, with a tinge of cold contempt:
“How changed you are, dear!”
“Am I?” laughed Alvina.
“Oh, not really.” And she gave the
arch look with her eyes, which made Miss Frost shudder.
Inwardly, Miss Frost shuddered, and
abstained from questioning. Alvina was always
speaking of the doctors: Doctor Young and Doctor
Headley and Doctor James. She spoke of theatres
and music-halls with these young men, and the jolly
good time she had with them. And her blue-grey
eyes seemed to have become harder and greyer, lighter
somehow. In her wistfulness and her tender pathos,
Alvina’s eyes would deepen their blue, so beautiful.
And now, in her floridity, they were bright and arch
and light-grey. The deep, tender, flowery blue
was gone for ever. They were luminous and crystalline,
like the eyes of a changeling.
Miss Frost shuddered, and abstained
from question. She wanted, she needed
to ask of her charge: “Alvina, have you
betrayed yourself with any of these young men?”
But coldly her heart abstained from asking or
even from seriously thinking. She left the matter
untouched for the moment. She was already too
much shocked.
Certainly Alvina represented the young
doctors as very nice, but rather fast young fellows.
“My word, you have to have your wits about you
with them!” Imagine such a speech from a girl
tenderly nurtured: a speech uttered in her own
home, and accompanied by a florid laugh, which would
lead a chaste, generous woman like Miss Frost to imagine well,
she merely abstained from imagining anything.
She had that strength of mind. She never for one
moment attempted to answer the question to herself,
as to whether Alvina had betrayed herself with any
of these young doctors, or not. The question
remained stated, but completely unanswered coldly
awaiting its answer. Only when Miss Frost kissed
Alvina good-bye at the station, tears came to her
eyes, and she said hurriedly, in a low voice:
“Remember we are all praying for you, dear!”
“No, don’t do that!”
cried Alvina involuntarily, without knowing what she
said.
And then the train moved out, and
she saw her darling standing there on the station,
the pale, well-modelled face looking out from behind
the gold-rimmed spectacles, wistfully, the strong,
rather stout figure standing very still and unchangeable,
under its coat and skirt of dark purple, the white
hair glistening under the folded dark hat. Alvina
threw herself down on the seat of her carriage.
She loved her darling. She would love her through
eternity. She knew she was right amply
and beautifully right, her darling, her beloved Miss
Frost. Eternally and gloriously right.
And yet and yet it
was a right which was fulfilled. There were other
rights. There was another side to the medal.
Purity and high-mindedness the beautiful,
but unbearable tyranny. The beautiful, unbearable
tyranny of Miss Frost! It was time now for Miss
Frost to die. It was time for that perfected flower
to be gathered to immortality. A lovely immortel.
But an obstruction to other, purple and carmine blossoms
which were in bud on the stem. A lovely edelweiss but
time it was gathered into eternity. Black-purple
and red anémones were due, real Adonis blood,
and strange individual orchids, spotted and fantastic.
Time for Miss Frost to die. She, Alvina, who
loved her as no one else would ever love her, with
that love which goes to the core of the universe,
knew that it was time for her darling to be folded,
oh, so gently and softly, into immortality. Mortality
was busy with the day after her day. It was time
for Miss Frost to die. As Alvina sat motionless
in the train, running from Woodhouse to Tibshelf, it
decided itself in her.
She was glad to be back in Islington,
among all the horrors of her confinement cases.
The doctors she knew hailed her. On the whole,
these young men had not any too deep respect for the
nurses as a whole. Why drag in respect?
Human functions were too obviously established to
make any great fuss about. And so the doctors
put their arms round Alvina’s waist, because
she was plump, and they kissed her face, because the
skin was soft. And she laughed and squirmed a
little, so that they felt all the more her warmth and
softness under their arm’s pressure.
“It’s no use, you know,”
she said, laughing rather breathless, but looking
into their eyes with a curious definite look of unchangeable
resistance. This only piqued them.
“What’s no use?” they asked.
She shook her head slightly.
“It isn’t any use your
behaving like that with me,” she said, with
the same challenging definiteness, finality: a
flat negative.
“Who’re you telling?” they said.
For she did not at all forbid them
to “behave like that.” Not in the
least. She almost encouraged them. She laughed
and arched her eyes and flirted. But her backbone
became only the stronger and firmer. Soft and
supple as she was, her backbone never yielded for an
instant. It could not. She had to confess
that she liked the young doctors. They were alert,
their faces were clean and bright-looking. She
liked the sort of intimacy with them, when they kissed
her and wrestled with her in the empty laboratories
or corridors often in the intervals of
most critical and appalling cases. She liked their
arm round her waist, the kisses as she reached back
her face, straining away, the sometimes desperate
struggles. They took unpardonable liberties.
They pinched her haunches and attacked her in unheard-of
ways. Sometimes her blood really came up in the
fight, and she felt as if, with her hands, she could
tear any man, any male creature, limb from limb.
A super-human, voltaic force filled her. For
a moment she surged in massive, inhuman, female strength.
The men always wilted. And invariably, when they
wilted, she touched them with a sudden gentle touch,
pitying. So that she always remained friends
with them. When her curious Amazonic power left
her again, and she was just a mere woman, she made
shy eyes at them once more, and treated them with
the inevitable female-to-male homage.
The men liked her. They cocked
their eyes at her, when she was not looking, and wondered
at her. They wondered over her. They had
been beaten by her, every one of them. But they
did not openly know it. They looked at her, as
if she were Woman itself, some creature not quite
personal. What they noticed, all of them, was
the way her brown hair looped over her ears.
There was something chaste, and noble, and war-like
about it. The remote quality which hung about
her in the midst of her intimacies and her frequencies,
nothing high or lofty, but something given to the
struggle and as yet invincible in the struggle, made
them seek her out.
They felt safe with her. They
knew she would not let them down. She would not
intrigue into marriage, or try and make use of them
in any way. She didn’t care about them.
And so, because of her isolate self-sufficiency in
the fray, her wild, overweening backbone, they were
ready to attend on her and serve her. Headley
in particular hoped he might overcome her. He
was a well-built fellow with sandy hair and a pugnacious
face. The battle-spirit was really roused in
him, and he heartily liked the woman. If he could
have overcome her he would have been mad to marry
her.
With him, she summoned up all her
mettle. She had never to be off her guard for
a single minute. The treacherous suddenness of
his attack for he was treachery itself had
to be met by the voltaic suddenness of her resistance
and counter-attack. It was nothing less than
magical the way the soft, slumbering body of the woman
could leap in one jet into terrible, overwhelming
voltaic force, something strange and massive, at the
first treacherous touch of the man’s determined
hand. His strength was so different from hers quick,
muscular, lambent. But hers was deep and heaving,
like the strange heaving of an earthquake, or the
heave of a bull as it rises from earth. And by
sheer non-human power, electric and paralysing, she
could overcome the brawny red-headed fellow.
He was nearly a match for her.
But she did not like him. The two were enemies and
good acquaintances. They were more or less matched.
But as he found himself continually foiled, he became
sulky, like a bear with a sore head. And then
she avoided him.
She really liked Young and James much
better. James was a quick, slender, dark-haired
fellow, a gentleman, who was always trying to catch
her out with his quickness. She liked his fine,
slim limbs, and his exaggerated generosity. He
would ask her out to ridiculously expensive suppers,
and send her sweets and flowers, fabulously recherche.
He was always immaculately well-dressed.
“Of course, as a lady and
a nurse,” he said to her, “you are two
sorts of women in one.”
But she was not impressed by his wisdom.
She was most strongly inclined to
Young. He was a plump young man of middle height,
with those blue eyes of a little boy which are so
knowing: particularly of a woman’s secrets.
It is a strange thing that these childish men have
such a deep, half-perverse knowledge of the other
sex. Young was certainly innocent as far as acts
went. Yet his hair was going thin at the crown
already.
He also played with her being
a doctor, and she a nurse who encouraged it.
He too touched her and kissed her: and did not
rouse her to contest. For his touch and his kiss
had that nearness of a little boy’s, which nearly
melted her. She could almost have succumbed to
him. If it had not been that with him there was
no question of succumbing. She would have had
to take him between her hands and caress and cajole
him like a cherub, into a fall. And though she
would have like to do so, yet that inflexible stiffness
of her backbone prevented her. She could not do
as she liked. There was an inflexible fate within
her, which shaped her ends.
Sometimes she wondered to herself,
over her own virginity. Was it worth much, after
all, behaving as she did? Did she care about it,
anyhow? Didn’t she rather despise it?
To sin in thought was as bad as to sin in act.
If the thought was the same as the act, how much more
was her behaviour equivalent to a whole committal?
She wished she were wholly committed. She wished
she had gone the whole length.
But sophistry and wishing did her
no good. There she was, still isolate. And
still there was that in her which would preserve her
intact, sophistry and deliberate intention notwithstanding.
Her time was up. She was returning to Woodhouse
virgin as she had left it. In a measure she felt
herself beaten. Why? Who knows. But
so it was, she felt herself beaten, condemned to go
back to what she was before. Fate had been too
strong for her and her desires: fate which was
not an external association of forces, but which was
integral in her own nature. Her own inscrutable
nature was her fate: sore against her will.
It was August when she came home,
in her nurse’s uniform. She was beaten
by fate, as far as chastity and virginity went.
But she came home with high material hopes. Here
was James Houghton’s own daughter. She
had an affluent future ahead of her. A fully-qualified
maternity nurse, she was going to bring all the babies
of the district easily and triumphantly into the world.
She was going to charge the regulation fee of two
guineas a case: and even on a modest estimate
of ten babies a month, she would have twenty guineas.
For well-to-do mothers she would charge from three
to five guineas. At this calculation she would
make an easy three hundred a year, without slaving
either. She would be independent, she could laugh
every one in the face.
She bounced back into Woodhouse to make her fortune.