Even now, when there is a certain
amount of choice and liberty, a woman who is thrown
on her own resources at thirty-nine, with no previous
training, and no obvious claims and duties, does not
find it very easy to know how to dispose of herself.
But a generation ago the problem was far more difficult.
Henrietta was well off for a single woman, but she
was incapable, and not easy to get on with. She
would have thought it derogatory to do any form of
teaching teaching, the natural refuge of
a workless woman.
Three or four courses presented themselves.
First, philanthropy. She was not really more
philanthropic than she had been at twenty, when her
aunt had described to her the happiness of living
for others. But she felt at nearly forty that
charitable work was a reasonable way of filling up
her time, on the whole, the most reasonable.
She never had had much to do with
poor people. Mrs. Symons had helped the charwoman,
and the gardener, and the driver from the livery-stables,
when they were in special difficulties, and Henrietta
had continued to do so, and had had her hour at the
hospital. That was all. There were the servants,
of course, but with the exception of Ellen she looked
on servants more as machines made for her convenience,
liable to get out of order unless they were constantly
watched.
Entirely without enthusiasm, and with
a dreary fighting against her lot, she made inquiries
among her acquaintances as to where she might find
charitable work. At length somebody knew somebody,
who knew somebody who was working in London under
a clergyman. After further inquiries it was found
that the somebody was a lady, who would be very glad
if Henrietta would come and live with her, while she
saw how she liked the work.
The clergyman, the lady, and all the
other workers, were earnest, enthusiastic, high-minded,
and full of common sense. Henrietta was not one
of these things. She was also very inaccurate,
unpunctual, and forgetful, and if her failings were
pointed out to her in the gentlest way she took offence,
not because she was conceited, but because at her
age she was beyond having things pointed out.
She stayed at the work six months, and during that
time she was always offended with somebody, and sometimes
with everybody.
The work was conducted more on charity
organization lines than was usual in those days; money
was not given without due consideration and consultation.
This was difficult, and required more thinking than
Henrietta cared for, so she saved herself trouble by
bestowing five shillings whenever she wanted, feeling
at the bottom of her heart that if she could not be
liked for herself, she would buy liking rather than
not be liked at all. The five shillings, however,
did not buy either gratitude or affection. She
had always had a grudging way with people of a different
class from herself, and a conviction, in spite of
indiscriminate alms, that she was being taken in.
This infringement of the rules drove the Vicar to
exasperation. His whole heart was in his work,
and Henrietta’s disloyalty hindered him at every
turn.
“Can’t she be asked to
give up meddling in the parish?” he said to his
wife.
“No dear, you know she can’t,
and she is very generous, even if she is tiresome.
She has often been very helpful to you. You ought
to be grateful.”
“I’m not grateful,”
he said, striding about the room; “and then she
is so petty, always these absurd squabbles. She
hasn’t got a spark of love for God or man.
That’s at the root of it all. We don’t
want a person of that sort here. If she cared
about the people, even if she did pauperize them,
I might think her a fool, but I could respect her;
but you know she doesn’t care for a soul but
herself.”
“I don’t think it is that,
but she’s in great trouble, I’m sure she
is. When you were preaching about sorrow last
Sunday, I saw her eyes were filled with tears.”
“Were they?” he said,
“I’m sorry. But look here, dear, I
don’t think this sort of work ought to be used
as a soothing syrup, or as a rubbish-shoot for loafers,
who don’t know what else to do. If people
aren’t doing it because they think it’s
the greatest privilege in the world to be allowed
to do it, I can’t see that they do much good.”
“I think you’re too hard on her.”
“Am I? I expect I am.
I know I’m fagged to death. She gives Mrs.
Wilkins pounds on the sly, which the old lady’s
been transforming into gin, and then when I explain
the circumstances and implore her to leave well alone,
she talks my head off with a torrent of incoherent
statements, which have nothing whatever to do with
the point.”
It certainly was true that Henrietta
did not do much good, and no one was more aware of
this than herself. She stood outside the community,
and looked in at them like a hungry beggar at a feast.
How she envied their happiness, but she did not feel
that she was, or ever could be, a partaker with them.
As months passed on, she drew no nearer to them.
They were all so busy, so strong in their union with
one another, they did not seem to have time to stretch
out a friendly hand to one who was at least as much
in need of it as Mrs. Wilkins.
The lady she lived with found her
trying. “A very trying person” was
the phrase that went the round about her, “always
criticizing small arrangements about the meals and
the housekeeping,” for Henrietta could not at
first reconcile herself to having no authority to exert,
and this jangling was not a good preparation for sisterly
sympathy towards her.
The Vicar’s wife might have
become friends with her, but during the six months
Henrietta was in the parish Mrs. Wharton was ill and
hardly able to see anyone. Besides, she was shy,
and the only time that Henrietta came to tea they
never succeeded in getting beyond a comparison of
foreign hotels.
Henrietta would have liked to confide
her troubles, but as she grew older she had become
a great deal more reserved, and also these troubles
she was ashamed to speak of. To think that she
had made her own sister, ill and miserable as she
was, more ill and more miserable, she could not forgive
herself; she was even harder on herself than Herbert
had been.
As Mr. Wharton had said, it was useless
engaging in this arduous work when her heart was elsewhere.
When her six months of trial came to an end, it was
clear that the only thing for her was to go. No
one could pretend they were sorry, and as everyone
imagined she was glad, there seemed no reason to disguise
their feelings. They would have been surprised
if they had known her thoughts as she sat at the evening
service on her last Sunday. “Whatever I
do, I fail; what is the use of my living? Why
was I born?”
She said to Mr. Wharton in her farewell
interview: “I know I have been very stupid
at learning what was to be done, and I have not been
willing to take advice. Now I look back, I see
the mistakes I have made, and I have done harm instead
of good. I want to give you” she
named a large sum considering the size of her income “to
spend as you think right, I hope that may help to
make amends. I am very sorry.”
He heard a quiver in her voice, and
the dislike and irritation he had felt all the six
months faded away.
“This is much too generous of
you,” he stammered. “It is my fault,
all my fault. I have been so irritable, I haven’t
made allowances. My wife tells me of it constantly.
I wish you would forgive me and give us another chance.
Stay six months longer.”
His awkwardness and distress almost
disarmed her, but she had felt his snubs, and at nearly
forty she was not going to be encouraged like a child.
So that though for many reasons she longed to stay,
she answered: “Thank you, it was a purely
temporary arrangement; I have other plans.”
As she walked home she wondered what
the other plans were.
When in doubt, go abroad. She
went abroad again for three months. Her companion
was picked up from nowhere in particular, an odd woman
like herself.
They went to Italy. Neither of
them cared in the smallest degree for sculpture, architecture,
painting, archaeology, poetry, history, politics,
scenery, languages, or foreigners. These last
Henrietta regarded as inferior Anglo-Indians regard
natives, referring to them always as “those
wretches.”
Like most women she loved certain
aspects in her garden at home, which were connected
with incidents in her life. There was a path bordered
by roses, along which they had walked when Evelyn
announced her engagement, and a special old apple-tree
reminded her of the night her mother died. But
to go and admire what Baedeker called a magnificent
coup d’oeil was no sort of pleasure to
her.
However, she and Miss Gurney had one
unending amusement, which Italy is peculiarly able
to supply. They could make short visits to different
towns, and fit sights into their days, as one fits
pieces into a puzzle. Henrietta found this sport
most satisfying.