And then Leonora completely broke
down-on the day that they returned to Branshaw
Teleragh. It is the infliction of our miserable
minds-it is the scourge of atrocious but
probably just destiny that no grief comes by itself.
No, any great grief, though the grief itself may have
gone, leaves in its place a train of horrors, of misery,
and despair. For Leonora was, in herself, relieved.
She felt that she could trust Edward with the girl
and she knew that Nancy could be absolutely trusted.
And then, with the slackening of her vigilance, came
the slackening of her entire mind. This is perhaps
the most miserable part of the entire story.
For it is miserable to see a clean intelligence waver;
and Leonora wavered.
You are to understand that Leonora
loved Edward with a passion that was yet like an agony
of hatred. And she had lived with him for years
and years without addressing to him one word of tenderness.
I don’t know how she could do it. At the
beginning of that relationship she had been just married
off to him. She had been one of seven daughters
in a bare, untidy Irish manor-house to which she had
returned from the convent I have so often spoken of.
She had left it just a year and she was just nineteen.
It is impossible to imagine such inexperience as was
hers. You might almost say that she had never
spoken to a man except a priest. Coming straight
from the convent, she had gone in behind the high walls
of the manor-house that was almost more cloistral than
any convent could have been. There were the seven
girls, there was the strained mother, there was the
worried father at whom, three times in the course of
that year, the tenants took pot-shots from behind
a hedge. The women-folk, upon the whole, the
tenants respected. Once a week each of the girls,
since there were seven of them, took a drive with the
mother in the old basketwork chaise drawn by a very
fat, very lumbering pony. They paid occasionally
a call, but even these were so rare that, Leonora has
assured me, only three times in the year that succeeded
her coming home from the convent did she enter another
person’s house. For the rest of the time
the seven sisters ran about in the neglected gardens
between the unpruned espaliers. Or they
played lawn-tennis or fives in an angle of a great
wall that surrounded the garden-an angle
from which the fruit trees had long died away.
They painted in water-colour; they embroidered; they
copied verses into albums. Once a week they went
to Mass; once a week to the confessional, accompanied
by an old nurse. They were happy since they had
known no other life.
It appeared to them a singular extravagance
when, one day, a photographer was brought over from
the county town and photographed them standing, all
seven, in the shadow of an old apple tree with the
grey lichen on the raddled trunk. But it wasn’t
an extravagance.
Three weeks before Colonel Powys had
written to Colonel Ashburnham:
“I say, Harry, couldn’t
your Edward marry one of my girls? It would be
a god-send to me, for I’m at the end of my tether
and, once one girl begins to go off, the rest of them
will follow.” He went on to say that all
his daughters were tall, upstanding, clean-limbed and
absolutely pure, and he reminded Colonel Ashburnham
that, they having been married on the same day, though
in different churches, since the one was a Catholic
and the other an Anglican-they had said
to each other, the night before, that, when the time
came, one of their sons should marry one of their
daughters. Mrs Ashburnham had been a Powys and
remained Mrs Powys’ dearest friend. They
had drifted about the world as English soldiers do,
seldom meeting, but their women always in correspondence
one with another. They wrote about minute things
such as the teething of Edward and of the earlier
daughters or the best way to repair a Jacob’s
ladder in a stocking. And, if they met seldom,
yet it was often enough to keep each other’s
personalities fresh in their minds, gradually growing
a little stiff in the joints, but always with enough
to talk about and with a store of reminiscences.
Then, as his girls began to come of age when they
must leave the convent in which they were regularly
interned during his years of active service, Colonel
Powys retired from the army with the necessity of
making a home for them. It happened that the
Ashburnhams had never seen any of the Powys girls,
though, whenever the four parents met in London, Edward
Ashburnham was always of the party. He was at
that time twenty-two and, I believe, almost as pure
in mind as Leonora herself. It is odd how a boy
can have his virgin intelligence untouched in this
world.
That was partly due to the careful
handling of his mother, partly to the fact that the
house to which he went at Winchester had a particularly
pure tone and partly to Edward’s own peculiar
aversion from anything like coarse language or gross
stories. At Sandhurst he had just kept out of
the way of that sort of thing. He was keen on
soldiering, keen on mathematics, on land-surveying,
on politics and, by a queer warp of his mind, on literature.
Even when he was twenty-two he would pass hours reading
one of Scott’s novels or the Chronicles of Froissart.
Mrs Ashburnham considered that she was to be congratulated,
and almost every week she wrote to Mrs Powys, dilating
upon her satisfaction.
Then, one day, taking a walk down
Bond Street with her son, after having been at Lord’s,
she noticed Edward suddenly turn his head round to
take a second look at a well-dressed girl who had
passed them. She wrote about that, too, to Mrs
Powys, and expressed some alarm. It had been,
on Edward’s part, the merest reflex action.
He was so very abstracted at that time owing to the
pressure his crammer was putting upon him that he
certainly hadn’t known what he was doing.
It was this letter of Mrs Ashburnham’s
to Mrs Powys that had caused the letter from Colonel
Powys to Colonel Ashburnham-a letter that
was half-humorous, half longing. Mrs Ashburnham
caused her husband to reply, with a letter a little
more jocular-something to the effect that
Colonel Powys ought to give them some idea of the goods
that he was marketing. That was the cause of
the photograph. I have seen it, the seven girls,
all in white dresses, all very much alike in feature-all,
except Leonora, a little heavy about the chins and
a little stupid about the eyes. I dare say it
would have made Leonora, too, look a little heavy
and a little stupid, for it was not a good photograph.
But the black shadow from one of the branches of the
apple tree cut right across her face, which is all
but invisible. There followed an extremely harassing
time for Colonel and Mrs Powys. Mrs Ashburnham
had written to say that, quite sincerely, nothing
would give greater ease to her maternal anxieties
than to have her son marry one of Mrs Powys’
daughters if only he showed some inclination to do
so. For, she added, nothing but a love-match
was to be thought of in her Edward’s case.
But the poor Powys couple had to run things so very
fine that even the bringing together of the young
people was a desperate hazard.
The mere expenditure upon sending
one of the girls over from Ireland to Branshaw was
terrifying to them; and whichever girl they selected
might not be the one to ring Edward’s bell.
On the other hand, the expenditure upon mere food
and extra sheets for a visit from the Ashburnhams to
them was terrifying, too. It would mean, mathematically,
going short in so many meals themselves, afterwards.
Nevertheless, they chanced it, and all the three Ashburnhams
came on a visit to the lonely manor-house. They
could give Edward some rough shooting, some rough fishing
and a whirl of femininity; but I should say the girls
made really more impression upon Mrs Ashburnham than
upon Edward himself. They appeared to her to
be so clean run and so safe. They were indeed
so clean run that, in a faint sort of way, Edward
seems to have regarded them rather as boys than as
girls. And then, one evening, Mrs Ashburnham had
with her boy one of those conversations that English
mothers have with English sons. It seems to have
been a criminal sort of proceeding, though I don’t
know what took place at it. Anyhow, next morning
Colonel Ashburnham asked on behalf of his son for
the hand of Leonora. This caused some consternation
to the Powys couple, since Leonora was the third daughter
and Edward ought to have married the eldest. Mrs
Powys, with her rigid sense of the proprieties, almost
wished to reject the proposal. But the Colonel,
her husband, pointed out that the visit would have
cost them sixty pounds, what with the hire of an extra
servant, of a horse and car, and with the purchase
of beds and bedding and extra tablecloths. There
was nothing else for it but the marriage. In that
way Edward and Leonora became man and wife.
I don’t know that a very minute
study of their progress towards complete disunion
is necessary. Perhaps it is. But there are
many things that I cannot well make out, about which
I cannot well question Leonora, or about which Edward
did not tell me. I do not know that there was
ever any question of love from Edward to her.
He regarded her, certainly, as desirable amongst her
sisters. He was obstinate to the extent of saying
that if he could not have her he would not have any
of them. And, no doubt, before the marriage,
he made her pretty speeches out of books that he had
read. But, as far as he could describe his feelings
at all, later, it seems that, calmly and without any
quickening of the pulse, he just carried the girl
off, there being no opposition. It had, however,
been all so long ago that it seemed to him, at the
end of his poor life, a dim and misty affair.
He had the greatest admiration for Leonora.
He had the very greatest admiration.
He admired her for her truthfulness, for her cleanness
of mind, and the clean-run-ness of her limbs, for
her efficiency, for the fairness of her skin, for the
gold of her hair, for her religion, for her sense
of duty. It was a satisfaction to take her about
with him.
But she had not for him a touch of
magnetism. I suppose, really, he did not love
her because she was never mournful; what really made
him feel good in life was to comfort somebody who
would be darkly and mysteriously mournful. That
he had never had to do for Leonora. Perhaps,
also, she was at first too obedient. I do not
mean to say that she was submissive-that
she deferred, in her judgements, to his. She did
not. But she had been handed over to him, like
some patient medieval virgin; she had been taught
all her life that the first duty of a woman is to
obey. And there she was.
In her, at least, admiration for his
qualities very soon became love of the deepest description.
If his pulses never quickened she, so I have been
told, became what is called an altered being when he
approached her from the other side of a dancing-floor.
Her eyes followed him about full of trustfulness,
of admiration, of gratitude, and of love. He was
also, in a great sense, her pastor and guide-and
he guided her into what, for a girl straight out of
a convent, was almost heaven. I have not the
least idea of what an English officer’s wife’s
existence may be like. At any rate, there were
feasts, and chatterings, and nice men who gave her
the right sort of admiration, and nice women who treated
her as if she had been a baby. And her confessor
approved of her life, and Edward let her give little
treats to the girls of the convent she had left, and
the Reverend Mother approved of him. There could
not have been a happier girl for five or six years.
For it was only at the end of that time that clouds
began, as the saying is, to arise. She was then
about twenty-three, and her purposeful efficiency
made her perhaps have a desire for mastery. She
began to perceive that Edward was extravagant in his
largesses. His parents died just about that
time, and Edward, though they both decided that he
should continue his soldiering, gave a great deal
of attention to the management of Branshaw through
a steward. Aldershot was not very far away, and
they spent all his leaves there.
And, suddenly, she seemed to begin
to perceive that his generosities were almost fantastic.
He subscribed much too much to things connected with
his mess, he pensioned off his father’s servants,
old or new, much too generously. They had a large
income, but every now and then they would find themselves
hard up. He began to talk of mortgaging a farm
or two, though it never actually came to that.
She made tentative efforts at remonstrating
with him. Her father, whom she saw now and then,
said that Edward was much too generous to his tenants;
the wives of his brother officers remonstrated with
her in private; his large subscriptions made it difficult
for their husbands to keep up with them. Ironically
enough, the first real trouble between them came from
his desire to build a Roman Catholic chapel at Branshaw.
He wanted to do it to honour Leonora, and he proposed
to do it very expensively. Leonora did not want
it; she could perfectly well drive from Branshaw to
the nearest Catholic Church as often as she liked.
There were no Roman Catholic tenants and no Roman Catholic
servants except her old nurse who could always drive
with her. She had as many priests to stay with
her as could be needed-and even the priests
did not want a gorgeous chapel in that place where
it would have merely seemed an invidious instance
of ostentation. They were perfectly ready to
celebrate Mass for Leonora and her nurse, when they
stayed at Branshaw, in a cleaned-up outhouse.
But Edward was as obstinate as a hog about it.
He was truly grieved at his wife’s want of sentiment-at
her refusal to receive that amount of public homage
from him. She appeared to him to be wanting in
imagination-to be cold and hard. I
don’t exactly know what part her priests played
in the tragedy that it all became; I dare say they
behaved quite creditably but mistakenly. But
then, who would not have been mistaken with Edward?
I believe he was even hurt that Leonora’s confessor
did not make strenuous efforts to convert him.
There was a period when he was quite ready to become
an emotional Catholic.
I don’t know why they did not
take him on the hop; but they have queer sorts of
wisdoms, those people, and queer sorts of tact.
Perhaps they thought that Edward’s too early
conversion would frighten off other Protestant désirables
from marrying Catholic girls. Perhaps they saw
deeper into Edward than he saw himself and thought
that he would make a not very creditable convert.
At any rate they-and Leonora-left
him very much alone. It mortified him very considerably.
He has told me that if Leonora had then taken his
aspirations seriously everything would have been different.
But I dare say that was nonsense. At any rate,
it was over the question of the chapel that they had
their first and really disastrous quarrel. Edward
at that time was not well; he supposed himself to
be overworked with his regimental affairs-he
was managing the mess at the time. And Leonora
was not well-she was beginning to fear
that their union might be sterile. And then her
father came over from Glasmoyle to stay with them.
Those were troublesome times in Ireland,
I understand. At any rate, Colonel Powys had
tenants on the brain-his own tenants having
shot at him with shot-guns. And, in conversation
with Edward’s land-steward, he got it into his
head that Edward managed his estates with a mad generosity
towards his tenants. I understand, also, that
those years-the ’nineties-were
very bad for farming. Wheat was fetching only
a few shillings the hundred; the price of meat was
so low that cattle hardly paid for raising; whole
English counties were ruined. And Edward allowed
his tenants very high rebates.
To do both justice Leonora has since
acknowledged that she was in the wrong at that time
and that Edward was following out a more far-seeing
policy in nursing his really very good tenants over
a bad period. It was not as if the whole of his
money came from the land; a good deal of it was in
rails. But old Colonel Powys had that bee in his
bonnet and, if he never directly approached Edward
himself on the subject, he preached unceasingly, whenever
he had the opportunity, to Leonora. His pet idea
was that Edward ought to sack all his own tenants and
import a set of farmers from Scotland. That was
what they were doing in Essex. He was of opinion
that Edward was riding hotfoot to ruin.
That worried Leonora very much-it
worried her dreadfully; she lay awake nights; she
had an anxious line round her mouth. And that,
again, worried Edward. I do not mean to say that
Leonora actually spoke to Edward about his tenants-but
he got to know that some one, probably her father,
had been talking to her about the matter. He got
to know it because it was the habit of his steward
to look in on them every morning about breakfast-time
to report any little happenings. And there was
a farmer called Mumford who had only paid half his
rent for the last three years. One morning the
land-steward reported that Mumford would be unable
to pay his rent at all that year. Edward reflected
for a moment and then he said something like:
“Oh well, he’s an old
fellow and his family have been our tenants for over
two hundred years. Let him off altogether.”
And then Leonora-you must
remember that she had reason for being very nervous
and unhappy at that time-let out a sound
that was very like a groan. It startled Edward,
who more than suspected what was passing in her mind-it
startled him into a state of anger. He said sharply:
“You wouldn’t have me
turn out people who’ve been earning money for
us for centuries-people to whom we have
responsibilities-and let in a pack of Scotch
farmers?”
He looked at her, Leonora said, with
what was practically a glance of hatred and then,
precipitately, he left the breakfast-table. Leonora
knew that it probably made it all the worse that he
had been betrayed into a manifestation of anger before
a third party. It was the first and last time
that he ever was betrayed into such a manifestation
of anger. The land-steward, a moderate and well-balanced
man whose family also had been with the Ashburnhams
for over a century, took it upon himself to explain
that he considered Edward was pursuing a perfectly
proper course with his tenants. He erred perhaps
a little on the side of generosity, but hard times
were hard times, and every one had to feel the pinch,
landlord as well as tenants. The great thing was
not to let the land get into a poor state of cultivation.
Scotch farmers just skinned your fields and let them
go down and down. But Edward had a very good set
of tenants who did their best for him and for themselves.
These arguments at that time carried very little conviction
to Leonora. She was, nevertheless, much concerned
by Edward’s outburst of anger. The fact
is that Leonora had been practising economies in her
department. Two of the under-housemaids had gone
and she had not replaced them; she had spent much
less that year upon dress. The fare she had provided
at the dinners they gave had been much less bountiful
and not nearly so costly as had been the case in preceding
years, and Edward began to perceive a hardness and
determination in his wife’s character. He
seemed to see a net closing round him-a
net in which they would be forced to live like one
of the comparatively poor county families of the neighbourhood.
And, in the mysterious way in which two people, living
together, get to know each other’s thoughts
without a word spoken, he had known, even before his
outbreak, that Leonora was worrying about his managing
of the estates. This appeared to him to be intolerable.
He had, too, a great feeling of self-contempt because
he had been betrayed into speaking harshly to Leonora
before that land-steward. She imagined that his
nerve must be deserting him, and there can have been
few men more miserable than Edward was at that period.
You see, he was really a very simple soul-very
simple. He imagined that no man can satisfactorily
accomplish his life’s work without loyal and
whole-hearted cooperation of the woman he lives with.
And he was beginning to perceive dimly that, whereas
his own traditions were entirely collective, his wife
was a sheer individualist. His own theory-the
feudal theory of an over-lord doing his best by his
dependents, the dependents meanwhile doing their best
for the over-lord-this theory was entirely
foreign to Leonora’s nature. She came of
a family of small Irish landlords-that hostile
garrison in a plundered country. And she was
thinking unceasingly of the children she wished to
have. I don’t know why they never had any
children-not that I really believe that
children would have made any difference. The
dissimilarity of Edward and Leonora was too profound.
It will give you some idea of the extraordinary naïveté
of Edward Ashburnham that, at the time of his marriage
and for perhaps a couple of years after, he did not
really know how children are produced. Neither
did Leonora. I don’t mean to say that this
state of things continued, but there it was. I
dare say it had a good deal of influence on their
mentalities. At any rate, they never had a child.
It was the Will of God.
It certainly presented itself to Leonora
as being the Will of God-as being a mysterious
and awful chastisement of the Almighty. For she
had discovered shortly before this period that her
parents had not exacted from Edward’s family
the promise that any children she should bear should
be brought up as Catholics. She herself had never
talked of the matter with either her father, her mother,
or her husband. When at last her father had let
drop some words leading her to believe that that was
the fact, she tried desperately to extort the promise
from Edward. She encountered an unexpected obstinacy.
Edward was perfectly willing that the girls should
be Catholic; the boys must be Anglican. I don’t
understand the bearing of these things in English society.
Indeed, Englishmen seem to me to be a little mad in
matters of politics or of religion. In Edward
it was particularly queer because he himself was perfectly
ready to become a Romanist. He seemed, however,
to contemplate going over to Rome himself and yet
letting his boys be educated in the religion of their
immediate ancestors. This may appear illogical,
but I dare say it is not so illogical as it looks.
Edward, that is to say, regarded himself as having
his own body and soul at his own disposal. But
his loyalty to the traditions of his family would not
permit him to bind any future inheritors of his name
or beneficiaries by the death of his ancestors.
About the girls it did not so much matter. They
would know other homes and other circumstances.
Besides, it was the usual thing. But the boys
must be given the opportunity of choosing-and
they must have first of all the Anglican teaching.
He was perfectly unshakable about this.
Leonora was in an agony during all
this time. You will have to remember she seriously
believed that children who might be born to her went
in danger, if not absolutely of damnation, at any
rate of receiving false doctrine. It was an agony
more terrible than she could describe. She didn’t
indeed attempt to describe it, but I could tell from
her voice when she said, almost negligently, “I
used to lie awake whole nights. It was no good
my spiritual advisers trying to console me.”
I knew from her voice how terrible and how long those
nights must have seemed and of how little avail were
the consolations of her spiritual advisers. Her
spiritual advisers seemed to have taken the matter
a little more calmly. They certainly told her
that she must not consider herself in any way to have
sinned. Nay, they seem even to have extorted,
to have threatened her, with a view to getting her
out of what they considered to be a morbid frame of
mind. She would just have to make the best of
things, to influence the children when they came,
not by propaganda, but by personality. And they
warned her that she would be committing a sin if she
continued to think that she had sinned. Nevertheless,
she continued to think that she had sinned.
Leonora could not be aware that the
man whom she loved passionately and whom, nevertheless,
she was beginning to try to rule with a rod of iron-that
this man was becoming more and more estranged from
her. He seemed to regard her as being not only
physically and mentally cold, but even as being actually
wicked and mean. There were times when he would
almost shudder if she spoke to him. And she could
not understand how he could consider her wicked or
mean. It only seemed to her a sort of madness
in him that he should try to take upon his own shoulders
the burden of his troop, of his regiment, of his estate
and of half of his country. She could not see
that in trying to curb what she regarded as megalomania
she was doing anything wicked. She was just trying
to keep things together for the sake of the children
who did not come. And, little by little, the
whole of their intercourse became simply one of agonized
discussion as to whether Edward should subscribe to
this or that institution or should try to reclaim
this or that drunkard. She simply could not see
it.
Into this really terrible position
of strain, from which there appeared to be no issue,
the Kilsyte case came almost as a relief. It is
part of the peculiar irony of things that Edward would
certainly never have kissed that nurse-maid if he
had not been trying to please Leonora. Nurse-maids
do not travel first-class, and, that day, Edward travelled
in a third-class carriage in order to prove to Leonora
that he was capable of economies. I have said
that the Kilsyte case came almost as a relief to the
strained situation that then existed between them.
It gave Leonora an opportunity of backing him up in
a whole-hearted and absolutely loyal manner.
It gave her the opportunity of behaving to him as
he considered a wife should behave to her husband.
You see, Edward found himself in a
railway carriage with a quite pretty girl of about
nineteen. And the quite pretty girl of about nineteen,
with dark hair and red cheeks and blue eyes, was quietly
weeping. Edward had been sitting in his corner
thinking about nothing at all. He had chanced
to look at the nurse-maid; two large, pretty tears
came out of her eyes and dropped into her lap.
He immediately felt that he had got to do something
to comfort her. That was his job in life.
He was desperately unhappy himself and it seemed to
him the most natural thing in the world that they
should pool their sorrows. He was quite democratic;
the idea of the difference in their station never seems
to have occurred to him. He began to talk to
her. He discovered that her young man had been
seen walking out with Annie of Number 54. He moved
over to her side of the carriage. He told her
that the report probably wasn’t true; that,
after all, a young man might take a walk with Annie
from Number 54 without its denoting anything very serious.
And he assured me that he felt at least quite half-fatherly
when he put his arm around her waist and kissed her.
The girl, however, had not forgotten the difference
of her station.
All her life, by her mother, by other
girls, by schoolteachers, by the whole tradition of
her class she had been warned against gentlemen.
She was being kissed by a gentleman. She screamed,
tore herself away; sprang up and pulled a communication
cord.
Edward came fairly well out of the
affair in the public estimation; but it did him, mentally,
a good deal of harm.