The River Ashe, after a drowsy and
meandering childhood, passed peacefully among the
sedges and marigolds of its water meadows, suddenly
and somewhat disconcertingly grows up and, without
any period of transition and adolescence, becomes,
from being a mere girl of a rivulet, a male and full-blooded
estuary of the sea. At Coton, for instance, the
tips of the sculls of a sauntering pleasure-boat will
almost span its entire width, while, but a mile farther
down, you will see stone-laden barges and tall, red-winged
sailing craft coming up with the tide, and making
fast to the grey wooden quay wall of Ashbridge, rough
with barnacles. For the reeds and meadow-sweet
of its margin are exchanged the brown and green growths
of the sea, with their sharp, acrid odour instead
of the damp, fresh smell of meadow flowers, and at
low tide the podded bladders of brown weed and long
strings of marine macaroni, among which peevish crabs
scuttle sideways, take the place of the grass and
spires of loosestrife; and over the water, instead
of singing larks, hang white companies of chiding
seagulls. Here at high tide extends a sheet of
water large enough, when the wind blows up the estuary,
to breed waves that break in foam and spray against
the barges, while at the ebb acres of mud flats are
disclosed on which the boats lean slanting till the
flood lifts them again and makes them strain at the
wheezing ropes that tie them to the quay.
A year before the flame of war went
roaring through Europe in unquenchable conflagration
it would have seemed that nothing could possibly rouse
Ashbridge from its red-brick Georgian repose.
There was never a town so inimitably drowsy or so
sternly uncompetitive. A hundred years ago it
must have presented almost precisely the same appearance
as it did in the summer of 1913, if we leave out of
reckoning a few dozen of modern upstart villas that
line its outskirts, and the very inconspicuous railway
station that hides itself behind the warehouses near
the river’s bank. Most of the trains, too,
quite ignore its existence, and pass through it on
their way to more rewarding stopping-places, hardly
recognising it even by a spurt of steam from their
whistles, and it is only if you travel by those that
require the most frequent pauses in their progress
that you will be enabled to alight at its thin and
depopulated platform.
Just outside the station there perennially
waits a low-roofed and sanguine omnibus that under
daily discouragement continues to hope that in the
long-delayed fulness of time somebody will want to
be driven somewhere. (This nobody ever does, since
the distance to any house is so small, and a porter
follows with luggage on a barrow.) It carries on its
floor a quantity of fresh straw, in the manner of the
stage coaches, in which the problematic passenger,
should he ever appear, will no doubt bury his feet.
On its side, just below the window that is not made
to open, it carries the legend that shows that it
belongs to the Comber Arms, a hostelry so self-effacing
that it is discoverable only by the sharpest-eyed
of pilgrims. Narrow roadways, flanked by proportionately
narrower pavements, lie ribbon-like between huddled
shops and squarely-spacious Georgian houses; and an
air of leisure and content, amounting almost to stupefaction,
is the moral atmosphere of the place.
On the outskirts of the town, crowning
the gentle hills that lie to the north and west, villas
in acre plots, belonging to business men in the county
town some ten miles distant, “prick their Cockney
ears” and are strangely at variance with the
sober gravity of the indigenous houses. So, too,
are the manners and customs of their owners, who go
to Stoneborough every morning to their work, and return
by the train that brings them home in time for dinner.
They do other exotic and unsuitable things also, like
driving swiftly about in motors, in playing golf on
the other side of the river at Coton, and in having
parties at each other’s houses. But apart
from them nobody ever seems to leave Ashbridge (though
a stroll to the station about the time that the evening
train arrives is a recognised diversion) or, in consequence,
ever to come back. Ashbridge, in fact, is self-contained,
and desires neither to meddle with others nor to be
meddled with.
The estuary opposite the town is some
quarter of a mile broad at high tide, and in order
to cross to the other side, where lie the woods and
park of Ashbridge House, it is necessary to shout and
make staccato prancings in order to attract the attention
of the antique ferryman, who is invariably at the
other side of the river and generally asleep at the
bottom of his boat. If you are strong-lunged and
can prance and shout for a long time, he may eventually
stagger to his feet, come across for you and row you
over. Otherwise you will stand but little chance
of arousing him from his slumbers, and you will stop
where you are, unless you choose to walk round by
the bridge at Coton, a mile above.
Periodical attempts are made by the
brisker inhabitants of Ashbridge, who do not understand
its spirit, to substitute for this aged and ineffectual
Charon someone who is occasionally awake, but nothing
ever results from these revolutionary moves, and the
requests addressed to the town council on the subject
are never heard of again. “Old George”
was ferryman there before any members of the town council
were born, and he seems to have established a right
to go to sleep on the other side of the river which
is now inalienable from him. Besides, asleep or
awake, he is always perfectly sober, which, after
all, is really one of the first requirements for a
suitable ferryman. Even the representations of
Lord Ashbridge himself who, when in residence, frequently
has occasion to use the ferry when crossing from his
house to the town, failed to produce the smallest
effect, and he was compelled to build a boathouse
of his own on the farther bank, and be paddled across
by himself or one of the servants. Often he rowed
himself, for he used to be a fine oarsman, and it
was good for the lounger on the quay to see the foaming
prow of his vigorous progress and the dignity of physical
toil.
In all other respects, except in this
case of “Old George,” Lord Ashbridge’s
wishes were law to the local authorities, for in this
tranquil East-coast district the spirit of the feudal
system with a beneficent lord and contented tenants
strongly survived. It had triumphed even over
such modern innovations as railroads, for Lord Ashbridge
had the undoubted right to stop any train he pleased
by signal at Ashbridge station. This he certainly
enjoyed doing; it fed his sense of the fitness of
things to progress along the platform with his genial,
important tiptoe walk, and elbows squarely stuck out,
to the carriage that was at once reserved for him,
to touch the brim of his grey top-hat (if travelling
up to town) to the obsequious guard, and to observe
the heads of passengers who wondered why their express
was arrested, thrust out of carriage windows to look
at him. A livened footman, as well as a valet,
followed him, bearing a coat and a rug and a morning
or evening paper and a dispatch-box with a large gilt
coronet on it, and bestowed these solaces to a railway
journey on the empty seats near him. And not
only his sense of fitness was hereby fed, but that
also of the station-master and the solitary porter
and the newsboy, and such inhabitants of Ashbridge
as happened to have strolled on to the platform.
For he was their Earl of Ashbridge, kind, courteous
and dominant, a local king; it was all very pleasant.
But this arrest of express trains
was a strictly personal privilege; when Lady Ashbridge
or Michael travelled they always went in the slow
train to Stoneborough, changed there and abided their
time on the platform like ordinary mortals. Though
he could undoubtedly have extended his rights to the
stopping of a train for his wife or son, he wisely
reserved this for himself, lest it should lose prestige.
There was sufficient glory already (to probe his mind
to the bottom) for Lady Ashbridge in being his wife;
it was sufficient also for Michael that he was his
son.
It may be inferred that there was
a touch of pomposity about this admirable gentleman,
who was so excellent a landlord and so hard working
a member of the British aristocracy. But pomposity
would be far too superficial a word to apply to him;
it would not adequately connote his deep-abiding and
essential conviction that on one of the days of Creation
(that, probably, on which the decree was made that
there should be Light) there leaped into being the
great landowners of England.
But Lord Ashbridge, though himself
a peer, by no means accepted the peerage en bloc as
representing the English aristocracy; to be, in his
phrase, “one of us” implied that you belonged
to certain well-ascertained families where brewers
and distinguished soldiers had no place, unless it
was theirs already. He was ready to pay all reasonable
homage to those who were distinguished by their abilities,
their riches, their exalted positions in Church and
State, but his homage to such was transfused with
a courteous condescension, and he only treated as
his equals and really revered those who belonged to
the families that were “one of us.”
His wife, of course, was “one
of us,” since he would never have permitted
himself to be allied to a woman who was not, though
for beauty and wisdom she might have been Aphrodite
and Athene rolled compactly into one peerless
identity. As a matter of fact, Lady Ashbridge
had not the faintest resemblance to either of these
effulgent goddesses. In person she resembled
a camel, long and lean, with a drooping mouth and
tired, patient eyes, while in mind she was stunned.
No idea other than an obvious one ever had birth behind
her high, smooth forehead, and she habitually brought
conversation to a close by the dry enunciation of
something indubitably true, which had no direct relation
to the point under discussion. But she had faint,
ineradicable prejudices, and instincts not quite dormant.
There was a large quantity of mild affection in her
nature, the quality of which may be illustrated by
the fact that when her father died she cried a little
every day after breakfast for about six weeks.
Then she did not cry any more. It was impossible
not to like what there was of her, but there was really
very little to like, for she belonged heart and soul
to the generation and the breeding among which it
is enough for a woman to be a lady, and visit the
keeper’s wife when she has a baby.
But though there was so little of
her, the balance was made up for by the fact that
there was so much of her husband. His large, rather
flamboyant person, his big white face and curling brown
beard, his loud voice and his falsetto laugh, his
absolutely certain opinions, above all the fervency
of his consciousness of being Lord Ashbridge and all
which that implied, completely filled any place he
happened to be in, so that a room empty except for
him gave the impression of being almost uncomfortably
crowded. This keen consciousness of his identity
was naturally sufficient to make him very good humoured,
since he was himself a fine example of the type that
he admired most. Probably only two persons in
the world had the power of causing him annoyance, but
both of these, by an irony of fate that it seemed scarcely
possible to consider accidental, were closely connected
with him, for one was his sister, the other his only
son.
The grounds of their potentiality
in this respect can be easily stated. Barbara
Comber, his sister (and so “one of us"), had
married an extremely wealthy American, who, in Lord
Ashbridge’s view, could not be considered one
of anybody at all; in other words, his imagination
failed to picture a whole class of people who resembled
Anthony Jerome. He had hoped when his sister
announced her intention of taking this deplorable
step that his future brother-in-law would at any rate
prove to be a snob-he had a vague notion
that all Americans were snobs-and that thus
Mr. Jerome would have the saving grace to admire and
toady him. But Mr. Jerome showed no signs of
doing anything of the sort; he treated him with an
austere and distant politeness that Lord Ashbridge
could not construe as being founded on admiration
and a sense of his own inferiority, for it was so
clearly founded on dislike. That, however, did
not annoy Lord Ashbridge, for it was easy to suppose
that poor Mr. Jerome knew no better. But Barbara
annoyed him, for not only had she shown herself a
renegade in marrying a man who was not “one of
us,” but with all the advantages she had enjoyed
since birth of knowing what “we” were,
she gloried in her new relations, saying, without any
proper reticence about the matter, that they were
Real People, whose character and wits vastly transcended
anything that Combers had to show.
Michael was an even more vexatious
case, and in moments of depression his father thought
that he would really turn in his grave at the dismal
idea of Michael having stepped into his honourable
shoes. Physically he was utterly unlike a Comber,
and his mind, his general attitude towards life seemed
to have diverged even farther from that healthy and
unreflective pattern. Only this morning his father
had received a letter from him that summed Michael
up, that fulfilled all the doubts and fears that had
hung about him; for after three years in the Guards
he had, without consultation with anybody, resigned
his commission on the inexplicable grounds that he
wanted to do something with his life. To begin
with that was rankly heretical; if you were a Comber
there was no need to do anything with your life; life
did everything for you. . . . And what this un-Comberish
young man wanted to do with his life was to be a musician.
That musicians, artists, actors, had a right to exist
Lord Ashbridge did not question. They were no
doubt (or might be) very excellent people in their
way, and as a matter of fact he often recognised their
existence by going to the opera, to the private view
of the Academy, or to the play, and he took a very
considerable pride of proprietorship in his own admirable
collection of family portraits. But then those
were pictures of Combers; Reynolds and Romney and the
rest of them had enjoyed the privilege of perpetuating
on their canvases these big, fine men and charming
women. But that a Comber-and that one
positively the next Lord Ashbridge-should
intend to devote his energies to an artistic calling,
and allude to that scheme as doing something with
his life, was a thing as unthinkable as if the butler
had developed a fixed idea that he was “one
of us.”
The blow was a recent one; Michael’s
letter had only reached his father this morning, and
at the present moment Lord Ashbridge was attempting
over a cup of tea on the long south terrace overlooking
the estuary to convey-not very successfully-to
his wife something of his feelings on the subject.
She, according to her custom, was drinking a little
hot water herself, and providing her Chinese pug with
a mixture of cream and crumbled rusks. Though
the dog was of undoubtedly high lineage, Lord Ashbridge
rather detested her.
“A musical career!” he
exclaimed, referring to Michael’s letter.
“What sort of a career for a Comber is a musical
career? I shall tell Michael pretty roundly when
he arrives this evening what I think of it all.
We shall have Francis next saying that he wants to
resign, too, and become a dentist.”
Lady Ashbridge considered this for
a moment in her stunned mind.
“Dear me, Robert, I hope not,”
she said. “I do not think it the least
likely that Francis would do anything of the kind.
Look, Petsy is better; she has drunk her cream and
rusks quite up. I think it was only the heat.”
He gave a little good-humoured giggle
of falsetto laughter.
“I wish, Marion,” he said,
“that you could manage to take your mind off
your dog for a moment and attend to me. And I
must really ask you not to give your Petsy any more
cream, or she will certainly be sick.”
Lady Ashbridge gave a little sigh.
“All gone, Petsy,” she said.
“I am glad it has all gone,”
said he, “and we will hope it won’t return.
But about Michael now!”
Lady Ashbridge pulled herself together.
“Yes, poor Michael!” she
said. “He is coming to-night, is he not?
But just now you were speaking of Francis, and the
fear of his wanting to be a dentist!”
“Well, I am now speaking of
Michael’s wanting to be a musician. Of
course that is utterly out of the question. If,
as he says, he has sent in his resignation, he will
just have to beg them to cancel it. Michael seems
not to have the slightest idea of the duties which
his birth and position entail on him. Unfitted
for the life he now leads . . . waste of time. . .
. Instead he proposes to go to Baireuth in August,
and then to settle down in London to study!”
Lady Ashbridge recollected the almanac.
“That will be in September,
then,” she said. “I do not think I
was ever in London in September. I did not know
that anybody was.”
“The point, my dear, is not
how or where you have been accustomed to spend your
Septembers,” said her husband. “What
we are talking about is-
“Yes, dear, I know quite well
what we are talking about,” said she. “We
are talking about Michael not studying music all September.”
Lord Ashbridge got up and began walking
across the terrace opposite the tea-table with his
elbows stuck out and his feet lifted rather high.
“Michael doesn’t seem
to realise that he is not Tom or Dick or Harry,”
said he. “Music, indeed! I’m
musical myself; all we Combers are musical. But
Michael is my only son, and it really distresses me
to see how little sense he has of his responsibilities.
Amusements are all very well; it is not that I want
to cut him off his amusements, but when it comes to
a career-
Lady Ashbridge was surreptitiously
engaged in pouring out a little more cream for Petsy,
and her husband, turning rather sooner than she had
expected, caught her in the act.
“Do not give Petsy any more
cream,” he said, with some asperity; “I
absolutely forbid it.”
Lady Ashbridge quite composedly replaced the cream-jug.
“Poor Petsy!” she observed.
“I ask you to attend to me, Marion,” he
said.
“But I am attending to you very
well, Robert,” said she, “and I understand
you perfectly. You do not want Michael to be a
musician in September and wear long hair and perhaps
play at concerts. I am sure I quite agree with
you, for such a thing would be as unheard of in my
family as in yours. But how do you propose to
stop it?”
“I shall use my authority,” he said, stepping
a little higher.
“Yes, dear, I am sure you will.
But what will happen if Michael doesn’t pay
any attention to your authority? You will be worse
off than ever. Poor Michael is very obedient
when he is told to do anything he intends to do, but
when he doesn’t agree it is difficult to do anything
with him. And, you see, he is quite independent
of you with my mother having left him so much money.
Poor mamma!”
Lord Ashbridge felt strongly about this.
“It was a most extraordinary
disposition of her property for your mother to make,”
he observed. “It has given Michael an independence
which I much deplore. And she did it in direct
opposition to my wishes.”
This touched on one of the questions
about which Lady Ashbridge had her convictions.
She had a mild but unalterable opinion that when anybody
died, all that they had previously done became absolutely
flawless and laudable.
“Mamma did as she thought right
with her property,” she said, “and it
is not for us to question it. She was conscientiousness
itself. You will have to excuse my listening
to any criticism you may feel inclined to make about
her, Robert.”
“Certainly, my dear. I
only want you to listen to me about Michael. You
agree with me on the impossibility of his adopting
a musical career. I cannot, at present, think
so ill of Michael as to suppose that he will defy
our joint authority.”
“Michael has a great will of
his own,” she remarked. “He gets that
from you, Robert, though he gets his money from his
grandmother.”
The futility of further discussion
with his wife began to dawn on Lord Ashbridge, as
it dawned on everybody who had the privilege of conversing
with her. Her mind was a blind alley that led
nowhere; it was clear that she had no idea to contribute
to the subject except slightly pessimistic forebodings
with which, unfortunately, he found himself secretly
disposed to agree. He had always felt that Michael
was an uncomfortable sort of boy; in other words,
that he had the inconvenient habit of thinking things
out for himself, instead of blindly accepting the
conclusions of other people.
Much as Lord Ashbridge valued the
sturdy independence of character which he himself
enjoyed displaying, he appreciated it rather less highly
when it was manifested by people who were not sensible
enough to agree with him. He looked forward to
Michael’s arrival that evening with the feeling
that there was a rebellious standard hoisted against
the calm blue of the evening sky, and remembering
the advent of his sister he wondered whether she would
not join the insurgent. Barbara Jerome, as has
been remarked, often annoyed her brother; she also
genially laughed at him; but Lord Ashbridge, partly
from affection, partly from a loyal family sense of
clanship, always expected his sister to spend a fortnight
with him in August, and would have been much hurt had
she refused to do so. Her husband, however, so
far from spending a fortnight with his brother-in-law,
never spent a minute in his presence if it could possibly
be avoided, an arrangement which everybody concerned
considered to be wise, and in the interests of cordiality.
“And Barbara comes this evening
as well as Michael, does she not?” he said.
“I hope she will not take Michael’s part
in his absurd scheme.”
“I have given Barbara the blue
room,” said Lady Ashbridge, after a little thought.
“I am afraid she may bring her great dog with
her. I hope he will not quarrel with Petsy.
Petsy does not like other dogs.”
The day had been very hot, and Lord
Ashbridge, not having taken any exercise, went off
to have a round of golf with the professional of the
links that lay not half a mile from the house.
He considered exercise an essential part of the true
Englishman’s daily curriculum, and as necessary
a contribution to the traditional mode of life which
made them all what they were-or should
be-as a bath in the morning or attendance
at church on Sunday. He did not care so much about
playing golf with a casual friend, because the casual
friend, as a rule, casually beat him-thus
putting him in an un-English position-and
preferred a game with this first-class professional
whose duty it was-in complete violation
of his capacities-to play just badly enough
to be beaten towards the end of the round after an
exciting match. It required a good deal of cleverness
and self-control to accomplish this, for Lord Ashbridge
was a notably puerile performer, but he generally managed
it with tact and success, by dint of missing absurdly
easy putts, and (here his skill came in) by pulling
and slicing his ball into far-distant bunkers.
Throughout the game it was his business to keep up
a running fire of admiring ejaculations such as “Well
driven, my lord,” or “A fine putt, my
lord. Ah! dear me, I wish I could putt like that,”
though occasionally his chorus of praise betrayed
him into error, and from habit he found himself saying:
“Good shot, my lord,” when my lord had
just made an egregious mess of things. But on
the whole he devised so pleasantly sycophantic an
atmosphere as to procure a substantial tip for himself,
and to make Lord Ashbridge conscious of being a very
superior performer. Whether at the bottom of
his heart he knew he could not play at all, he probably
did not inquire; the result of his matches and his
opponent’s skilfully-showered praise was sufficient
for him. So now he left the discouraging companionship
of his wife and Petsy and walked swingingly across
the garden and the park to the links, there to seek
in Macpherson’s applause the self-confidence
that would enable him to encounter his republican
sister and his musical son with an unyielding front.
His spirits mounted rapidly as he
went. It pleased him to go jauntily across the
lawn and reflect that all this smooth turf was his,
to look at the wealth of well-tended flowers in his
garden and know that all this polychromatic loveliness
was bred in Lord Ashbridge’s borders (and was
graciously thrown open to the gaze of the admiring
public on Sunday afternoon, when they were begged
to keep off the grass), and that Lord Ashbridge was
himself. He liked reminding himself that the towering
elms drew their leafy verdure from Lord Ashbridge’s
soil; that the rows of hen-coops in the park, populous
and cheeping with infant pheasants, belonged to the
same fortunate gentleman who in November would so
unerringly shoot them down as they rocketted swiftly
over the highest of his tree-tops; that to him also
appertained the long-fronted Jacobean house which
stood so commandingly upon the hill-top, and glowed
with all the mellowness of its three-hundred-years-old
bricks. And his satisfaction was not wholly fatuous
nor entirely personal; all these spacious dignities
were insignia (temporarily conferred on him, like
some order, and permanently conferred on his family)
of the splendid political constitution under which
England had made herself mistress of an empire and
the seas that guarded it. Probably he would have
been proud of belonging to that even if he had not
been “one of us”; as it was, the high
position which he occupied in it caused that pride
to be slightly mixed with the pride that was concerned
with the notion of the Empire belonging to him and
his peers.
But though he was the most profound
of Tories, he would truthfully have professed (as
indeed he practised in the management of his estates)
the most Liberal opinions as to schemes for the amelioration
of the lower classes. Only, just as the music
he was good enough to listen to had to be played for
him, so the tenants and farmers had to be his dependents.
He looked after them very well indeed, conceiving this
to be the prime duty of a great landlord, but his
interest in them was really proprietary. It was
of his bounty, and of his complete knowledge of what
his duties as “one of us” were, that he
did so, and any legislation which compelled him to
part with one pennyworth of his property for the sake
of others less fortunate he resisted to the best of
his ability as a theft of what was his. The country,
in fact, if it went to the dogs (and certain recent
legislation distinctly seemed to point kennelwards),
would go to the dogs because ignorant politicians,
who were most emphatically not “of us,”
forced him and others like him to recognise the rights
of dependents instead of trusting to their instinctive
fitness to dispense benefits not as rights but as acts
of grace. If England trusted to her aristocracy
(to put the matter in a nutshell) all would be well
with her in the future even as it had been in the past,
but any attempt to curtail their splendours must inevitably
detract from the prestige and magnificence of the
Empire. . . . And he responded suitably to the
obsequious salute of the professional, and remembered
that the entire golf links were his property, and that
the Club paid a merely nominal rental to him, just
the tribute money of a penny which was due to Cæsar.
For the next hour or two after her
husband had left her, Lady Ashbridge occupied herself
in the thoroughly lady-like pursuit of doing nothing
whatever; she just existed in her comfortable chair,
since Barbara might come any moment, and she would
have to entertain her, which she frequently did unawares.
But as Barbara continued not to come, she took up
her perennial piece of needlework, feeling rather busy
and pressed, and had hardly done so when her sister-in-law
arrived.
She was preceded by an enormous stag-hound,
who, having been shut up in her motor all the way
from London, bounded delightedly, with the sense of
young limbs released, on to the terrace, and made wild
leaps in a circle round the horrified Petsy, who had
just received a second saucerful of cream. Once
he dashed in close, and with a single lick of his
tongue swept the saucer dry of nutriment, and with
hoarse barkings proceeded again to dance corybantically
about, while Lady Ashbridge with faint cries of dismay
waved her embroidery at him. Then, seeing his
mistress coming out of the French window from the drawing-room,
he bounded calf-like towards her, and Petsy, nearly
sick with cream and horror, was gathered to Lady Ashbridge’s
bosom.
“My dear Barbara,” she
said, “how upsetting your dog is! Poor Petsy’s
heart is beating terribly; she does not like dogs.
But I am very pleased to see you, and I have given
you the blue room.”
It was clearly suitable that Barbara
Jerome should have a large dog, for both in mind and
body she was on the large scale herself. She had
a pleasant, high-coloured face, was very tall, enormously
stout, and moved with great briskness and vigour.
She had something to say on any subject that came
on the board; and, what was less usual in these days
of universal knowledge, there was invariably some
point in what she said. She had, in the ordinary
sense of the word, no manners at all, but essentially
made up for this lack by her sincere and humourous
kindliness. She saw with acute vividness the ludicrous
side of everybody, herself included, and to her mind
the arch-humourist of all was her brother, whom she
was quite unable to take seriously. She dressed
as if she had looted a milliner’s shop and had
put on in a great hurry anything that came to hand.
She towered over her sister-in-law as she kissed her,
and Petsy, safe in her citadel, barked shrilly.
“My dear, which is the blue
room?” she said. “I hope it is big
enough for Og and me. Yes, that is Og, which
is short for dog. He takes two mutton-chops for
dinner, and a little something during the night if
he feels disposed, because he is still growing.
Tony drove down with me, and is in the car now.
He would not come in for fear of seeing Robert, so
I ventured to tell them to take him a cup of tea there,
which he will drink with the blinds down, and then
drive back to town again. He has been made American
ambassador, by the way, and will go in to dinner before
Robert. My dear, I can think of few things which
Robert is less fitted to bear than that. However,
we all have our crosses, even those of us who have
our coronets also.”
Lady Ashbridge’s hospitable
instincts asserted themselves. “But your
husband must come in,” she said. “I
will go and tell him. And Robert has gone to
play golf.”
Barbara laughed.
“I am quite sure Tony won’t
come in,” she said. “I promised him
he shouldn’t, and he only drove down with me
on the express stipulation that no risks were to be
run about his seeing Robert. We must take no
chances, so let him have his tea quietly in the motor
and then drive away again. And who else is there?
Anybody? Michael?”
“Michael comes this evening.”
“I am glad; I am particularly
fond of Michael. Also he will play to us after
dinner, and though I don’t know one note from
another, it will relieve me of sitting in a stately
circle watching Robert cheat at patience. I always
find the evenings here rather trying; they remind me
of being in church. I feel as if I were part of
a corporate body, which leads to misplaced decorum.
Ah! there is the sound of Tony’s retreating
motor; his strategic movement has come off. And
now give me some news, if you can get in a word.
Dear me, there is Robert coming back across the lawn.
What a mercy that Tony did not leave the motor.
Robert always walks as if he was dancing a minuet.
Look, there is Og imitating him! Or is he stalking
him, thinking he is an enemy. Og, come here!”
She whistled shrilly on her fingers,
and rose to greet her brother, whom Og was still menacing,
as he advanced towards her with staccato steps.
Barbara, however, got between Og and his prey, and
threw her parasol at him.
“My dear, how are you?”
she said. “And how did the golf go?
And did you beat the professional?”
He suspected flippancy here, and became
markedly dignified.
“An excellent match,”
he said, “and Macpherson tells me I played a
very sound game. I am delighted to see you, Barbara.
And did Michael come down with you?”
“No. I drove from town.
It saves time, but not expense, with your awful trains.”
“And you are well, and Mr. Jerome?”
he asked. He always called his brother-in-law
Mr. Jerome, to indicate the gulf between them.
Barbara gave a little spurt of laughter.
“Yes, his excellency is quite
well,” she said. “You must call him
excellency now, my dear.”
“Indeed! That is a great step.”
“Considering that Tony began
as an office-boy. How richly rewarding you are,
my dear. And shan’t I make an odd ambassadress!
I haven’t been to a Court since the dark ages,
when I went to those beloved States. We will
practise after dinner, dear, and you and Marion shall
be the King and Queen, and I will try to walk backwards
without tumbling on my head. You will like being
the King, Robert. And then we will be ourselves
again, all except Og, who shall be Tony and shall
go out of the room before you.”
He gave his treble little giggle,
for on the whole it answered better not to be dignified
with Barbara, whenever he could remember not to be;
and Lady Ashbridge, still nursing Petsy, threw a bombshell
of the obvious to explode the conversation.
“Og has two mutton-chops for
his dinner,” she said, “and he is growing
still. Fancy!”
Lord Ashbridge took a refreshing glance
at the broad stretch of country that all belonged
to him.
“I am rather glad to have this
opportunity of talking to you, my dear Barbara,”
he said, “before Michael comes.”
“His train gets in half an hour
before dinner” said Lady Ashbridge. “He
has to change at Stoneborough.”
“Quite so. I heard from
Michael this morning, saying that he has resigned
his commission in the Guards, and is going to take
up music seriously.”
Barbara gave a delighted exclamation.
“But how perfectly splendid!”
she said. “Fancy a Comber doing anything
original! Michael and I are the only Combers who
ever have, since Combers ‘arose from out the
azure main’ in the year one. I married an
American; that’s something, though it’s
not up to Michael!”
“That is not quite my view of
it,” said he. “As for its being original,
it would be original enough if Marion eloped with a
Patagonian.”
Lady Ashbridge let fall her embroidery
at this monstrous suggestion.
“You are talking very wildly,
Robert,” she said, in a pained voice.
“My dear, get on with your sacred
carpet,” said he. “I am talking to
Barbara. I have already ascertained your-your
lack of views on the subject. I was saying, Barbara,
that mere originality is not a merit.”
“No, you never said that,” remarked Lady
Ashbridge.
“I should have if you had allowed
me to. And as for your saying that he has done
it, Barbara, that is very wide of the mark, and I intend
shall continue to be so.”
“Dear great Bashaw, that is
just what you said to me when I told you I was going
to marry his Excellency. But I did. And I
think it is a glorious move on Michael’s part.
It requires brain to find out what you like, and character
to go and do it. Combers haven’t got brains
as a rule, you see. If they ever had any, they
have degenerated into conservative instincts.”
He again refreshed himself with the
landscape. The roofs of Ashbridge were visible
in the clear sunset. . . . Ashbridge paid its
rents with remarkable regularity.
“That may or may not be so,”
he said, forgetting for a moment the danger of being
dignified. “But Combers have position.”
Barbara controlled herself admirably.
A slight tremor shook her, which he did not notice.
“Yes, dear,” she said.
“I allow that Combers have had for many generations
a sort of acquisitive cunning, for all we possess has
come to us by exceedingly prudent marriages. They
have also-I am an exception here-the
gift of not saying very much, which certainly has an
impressive effect, even when it arises from not having
very much to say. They are sticky; they attract
wealth, and they have the force called vis inertiae,
which means that they invest their money prudently.
You should hear Tony-well, perhaps you
had better not hear Tony. But now here is Michael
showing that he has got tastes. Can you wonder
that I’m delighted? And not only has he
got tastes, but he has the strength of character to
back them. Michael, in the Guards too! It
was a perfect farce, and he’s had the sense
to see it. He hated his duties, and he hated
his diversions. Now Francis-
“I am afraid Michael has always
been a little jealous of Francis,” remarked
his father.
This roused Barbara; she spoke quite seriously:
“If you really think that, my
dear,” she said, “you have the distinction
of being the worst possible judge of character that
the world has ever known. Michael might be jealous
of anybody else, for the poor boy feels his physical
awkwardness most sensitively, but Francis is just the
one person he really worships. He would do anything
in the world for him.”
The discussion with Barbara was being
even more fruitless than that with his wife, and Lord
Ashbridge rose.
“All I can do, then, is to ask
you not to back Michael up,” he said.
“My dear, he won’t need
backing up. He’s a match for you by himself.
But if Michael, after thoroughly worsting you, asks
me my opinion, I shall certainly give it him.
But he won’t ask my opinion first. He will
strew your limbs, Robert, over this delightful terrace.”
“Michael’s train is late,”
said Lady Ashbridge, hearing the stable clock strike.
“He should have been here before this.”
Barbara had still a word to say, and
disregarded this quencher.
“But don’t think, Robert,”
she said, “that because Michael resists your
wishes and authority, he will be enjoying himself.
He will hate doing it, but that will not stop him.”
Lord Ashbridge was not a bully; he
had merely a profound sense of his own importance.
“We will see about resistance,” he said.
Barbara was not so successful on this occasion, and
exploded loudly:
“You will, dear, indeed,” she said.
Michael meantime had been travelling
down from London without perturbing himself over the
scene with his father which he knew lay before him.
This was quite characteristic of him; he had a singular
command over his imagination when he had made up his
mind to anything, and never indulged in the gratuitous
pain of anticipation. Today he had an additional
bulwark against such self-inflicted worries, for he
had spent his last two hours in town at the vocal
recital of a singer who a month before had stirred
the critics into rhapsody over her gift of lyric song.
Up till now he had had no opportunity of hearing her;
and, with the panegyrics that had been showered on
her in his mind, he had gone with the expectation
of disappointment. But now, an hour afterwards,
the wheels of the train sang her songs, and in the
inward ear he could recapture, with the vividness
of an hallucination, the timbre of that wonderful
voice and also the sweet harmonies of the pianist who
accompanied her.
The hall had been packed from end
to end, and he had barely got to his seat, the only
one vacant in the whole room, when Miss Sylvia Falbe
appeared, followed at once by her accompanist, whose
name occurred nowhere on the programme. Two neighbours,
however, who chatted shrilly during the applause that
greeted them, informed him that this was Hermann,
“dear Hermann; there is no one like him!”
But it occurred to Michael that the singer was like
him, though she was fair and he dark. But his
perception of either of them visually was but vague;
he had come to hear and not to see. Neither she
nor Hermann had any music with them, and Hermann just
glanced at the programme, which he put down on the
top of the piano, which, again unusually, was open.
Then without pause they began the set of German songs-Brahms,
Schubert, Schumann-with which the recital
opened. And for one moment, before he lost himself
in the ecstasy of hearing, Michael found himself registering
the fact that Sylvia Falbe had one of the most charming
faces he had ever seen. The next he was swallowed
up in melody.
She had the ease of the consummate
artist, and each note, like the gates of the New Jerusalem,
was a pearl, round and smooth and luminous almost,
so that it was as if many-coloured light came from
her lips. Nor was that all; it seemed as if the
accompaniment was made by the song itself, coming
into life with the freshness of the dawn of its creation;
it was impossible to believe that one mind directed
the singer and another the pianist, and if the voice
was an example of art in excelsis, not less exalted
was the perfection of the player. Not for a moment
through the song did he take his eyes off her; he
looked at her with an intensity of gaze that seemed
to be reading the emotion with which the lovely melody
filled her. For herself, she looked straight out
over the hall, with grey eyes half-closed, and mouth
that in the pauses of her song was large and full-lipped,
generously curving, and face that seemed lit with
the light of the morning she sang of. She was
the song; Michael thought of her as just that, and
the pianist who watched and understood her so unerringly
was the song, too. They had for him no identity
of their own; they were as remote from everyday life
as the mind of Schumann which they made so vivid.
It was then that they existed.
The last song of the group she sang
in English, for it was “Who is Sylvia?”
There was a buzz of smiles and whispers among the front
row in the pause before it, and regaining her own
identity for a moment, she smiled at a group of her
friends among whom clearly it was a cliche species
of joke that she should ask who Sylvia was, and enumerate
her merits, when all the time she was Sylvia.
Michael felt rather impatient at this; she was not
anybody just now but a singer. And then came the
divine inevitable simplicity of perfect words and the
melody preordained for them. The singer, as he
knew, was German, but she had no trace of foreign
accent. It seemed to him that this was just one
miracle the more; she had become English because she
was singing what Shakespeare wrote.
The next group, consisting of modern
French songs, appeared to Michael utterly unworthy
of the singer and the echoing piano. If you had
it in you to give reality to great and simple things,
it was surely a waste to concern yourself with these
little morbid, melancholy manikins, these marionettes.
But his emotions being unoccupied he attended more
to the manner of the performance, and in especial
to the marvellous technique, not so much of the singer,
but of the pianist who caused the rain to fall and
the waters reflect the toneless grey skies. He
had never, even when listening to the great masters,
heard so flawless a comprehension as this anonymous
player, incidentally known as Hermann, exhibited.
As far as mere manipulation went, it was, as might
perhaps be expected, entirely effortless, but effortless
no less was the understanding of the music. It
happened. . . . It was like that.
All of this so filled Michael’s
mind as he travelled down that evening to Ashbridge,
that he scarcely remembered the errand on which he
went, and when it occurred to him it instantly sank
out of sight again, lost in the recollection of the
music which he had heard to-day and which belonged
to the art that claimed the allegiance of his soul.
The rattle of the wheels was alchemised into song,
and as with half-closed eyes he listened to it, there
swam across it now the full face of the singer, now
the profile of the pianist, that had stood out white
and intent against the dark panelling behind his head.
He had gleaned one fact at the box-office as he hurried
out to catch his train: this Hermann was the
singer’s brother, a teacher of the piano in London,
and apparently highly thought of.