“It was about that time (Merrick
went on after a long pause) that I definitely decided
not to sell the Works, but to stick to my job and
conform my life to it.
“I can’t describe to you
the rage of conformity that possessed me. Poetry,
ideas all the picture-making processes stopped.
A kind of dull self-discipline seemed to me the only
exercise worthy of a reflecting mind. I had
to justify my great refusal, and I tried to do it by
plunging myself up to the eyes into the very conditions
I had been instinctively struggling to get away from.
The only possible consolation would have been to find
in a life of business routine and social submission
such moral compensations as may reward the citizen
if they fail the man; but to attain to these I should
have had to accept the old delusion that the social
and the individual man are two. Now, on the contrary,
I found soon enough that I couldn’t get one part
of my machinery to work effectively while another
wanted feeding: and that in rejecting what had
seemed to me a negation of action I had made all my
action negative.
“The best solution, of course,
would have been to fall in love with another woman;
but it was long before I could bring myself to wish
that this might happen to me.... Then, at length,
I suddenly and violently desired it; and as such impulses
are seldom without some kind of imperfect issue I
contrived, a year or two later, to work myself up into
the wished-for state.... She was a woman in society,
and with all the awe of that institution that Paulina
lacked. Our relation was consequently one of
those unavowed affairs in which triviality is the
only alternative to tragedy. Luckily we had, on
both sides, risked only as much as prudent people
stake in a drawingroom game; and when the match was
over I take it that we came out fairly even.
“My gain, at all events, was
of an unexpected kind. The adventure had served
only to make me understand Paulina’s abhorrence
of such experiments, and at every turn of the slight
intrigue I had felt how exasperating and belittling
such a relation was bound to be between two people
who, had they been free, would have mated openly.
And so from a brief phase of imperfect forgetting
I was driven back to a deeper and more understanding
remembrance....
“This second incarnation of
Paulina was one of the strangest episodes of the whole
strange experience. Things she had said during
our extraordinary talk, things I had hardly heard
at the time, came back to me with singular vividness
and a fuller meaning. I hadn’t any longer
the cold consolation of believing in my own perspicacity:
I saw that her insight had been deeper and keener
than mine.
“I remember, in particular,
starting up in bed one sleepless night as there flashed
into my head the meaning of her last words: ’There
was no other way’; the phrase I had half-smiled
at at the time, as a parrot-like echo of the novel-heroine’s
stock farewell. I had never, up to that moment,
wholly understood why Paulina had come to my house
that night. I had never been able to make that
particular act which could hardly, in the
light of her subsequent conduct, be dismissed as a
blind surge of passion square with my conception
of her character. She was at once the most spontaneous
and the steadiest-minded woman I had ever known, and
the last to wish to owe any advantage to surprise,
to unpreparedness, to any play on the spring of sex.
The better I came, retrospectively, to know her, the
more sure I was of this, and the less intelligible
her act appeared. And then, suddenly, after a
night of hungry restless thinking, the flash of enlightenment
came. She had come to my house, had brought her
trunk with her, had thrown herself at my head with
all possible violence and publicity, in order to give
me a pretext, a loophole, an honourable excuse, for
doing and saying why, precisely what I
had said and done!
“As the idea came to me it was
as if some ironic hand had touched an electric button,
and all my fatuous phrases had leapt out on me in fire.
“Of course she had known all
along just the kind of thing I should say if I didn’t
at once open my arms to her; and to save my pride,
my dignity, my conception of the figure I was cutting
in her eyes, she had recklessly and magnificently
provided me with the decentest pretext a man could
have for doing a pusillanimous thing....
“With that discovery the whole
case took a different aspect. It hurt less to
think of Paulina and yet it hurt more.
The tinge of bitterness, of doubt, in my thoughts
of her had had a tonic quality. It was harder
to go on persuading myself that I had done right as,
bit by bit, my theories crumbled under the test of
time. Yet, after all, as she herself had said,
one could judge of results only in the long run....
“The Trants stayed away for
two years; and about a year after they got back, you
may remember, Trant was killed in a railway accident.
You know Fate’s way of untying a knot after
everybody has given up tugging at it!
“Well there I was,
completely justified: all my weaknesses turned
into merits! I had ‘saved’ a weak
woman from herself, I had kept her to the path of
duty, I had spared her the humiliation of scandal and
the misery of self-reproach; and now I had only to
put out my hand and take my reward.
“I had avoided Paulina since
her return, and she had made no effort to see me.
But after Trant’s death I wrote her a few lines,
to which she sent a friendly answer; and when a decent
interval had elapsed, and I asked if I might call
on her, she answered at once that she would see me.
“I went to her house with the
fixed intention of asking her to marry me and
I left it without having done so. Why? I
don’t know that I can tell you. Perhaps
you would have had to sit there opposite her, knowing
what I did and feeling as I did, to understand why.
She was kind, she was compassionate I could
see she didn’t want to make it hard for me.
Perhaps she even wanted to make it easy. But there,
between us, was the memory of the gesture I hadn’t
made, forever parodying the one I was attempting!
There wasn’t a word I could think of that hadn’t
an echo in it of words of hers I had been deaf to;
there wasn’t an appeal I could make that didn’t
mock the appeal I had rejected. I sat there and
talked of her husband’s death, of her plans,
of my sympathy; and I knew she understood; and knowing
that, in a way, made it harder.... The door-bell
rang and the footman came in to ask if she would receive
other visitors. She looked at me a moment and
said ‘Yes,’ and I got up and shook hands
and went away.
“A few days later she sailed
for Europe, and the next time we met she had married
Reardon....”