IDEALS AND A REALITY
Part 1
And now for some weeks Ann Veronica
was to test her market value in the world. She
went about in a negligent November London that had
become very dark and foggy and greasy and forbidding
indeed, and tried to find that modest but independent
employment she had so rashly assumed. She went
about, intent-looking and self-possessed, trim and
fine, concealing her emotions whatever they were,
as the realities of her position opened out before
her. Her little bed-sitting-room was like a lair,
and she went out from it into this vast, dun world,
with its smoke-gray houses, its glaring streets of
shops, its dark streets of homes, its orange-lit windows,
under skies of dull copper or muddy gray or black,
much as an animal goes out to seek food. She
would come back and write letters, carefully planned
and written letters, or read some book she had fetched
from Mudie’s she had invested a half-guinea
with Mudie’s or sit over her fire
and think.
Slowly and reluctantly she came to
realize that Vivie Warren was what is called an “ideal.”
There were no such girls and no such positions.
No work that offered was at all of the quality she
had vaguely postulated for herself. With such
qualifications as she possessed, two chief channels
of employment lay open, and neither attracted her,
neither seemed really to offer a conclusive escape
from that subjection to mankind against which, in
the person of her father, she was rebelling.
One main avenue was for her to become a sort of salaried
accessory wife or mother, to be a governess or an
assistant schoolmistress, or a very high type of governess-nurse.
The other was to go into business into a
photographer’s reception-room, for example, or
a costumer’s or hat-shop. The first set
of occupations seemed to her to be altogether too domestic
and restricted; for the latter she was dreadfully handicapped
by her want of experience. And also she didn’t
like them. She didn’t like the shops, she
didn’t like the other women’s faces; she
thought the smirking men in frock-coats who dominated
these establishments the most intolerable persons
she had ever had to face. One called her very
distinctly “My dear!”
Two secretarial posts did indeed seem
to offer themselves in which, at least, there was
no specific exclusion of womanhood; one was under
a Radical Member of Parliament, and the other under
a Harley Street doctor, and both men declined her
proffered services with the utmost civility and admiration
and terror. There was also a curious interview
at a big hotel with a middle-aged, white-powdered woman,
all covered with jewels and reeking of scent, who
wanted a Companion. She did not think Ann Veronica
would do as her companion.
And nearly all these things were fearfully
ill-paid. They carried no more than bare subsistence
wages; and they demanded all her time and energy.
She had heard of women journalists, women writers,
and so forth; but she was not even admitted to the
presence of the editors she demanded to see, and by
no means sure that if she had been she could have
done any work they might have given her. One day
she desisted from her search and went unexpectedly
to the Tredgold College. Her place was not filled;
she had been simply noted as absent, and she did a
comforting day of admirable dissection upon the tortoise.
She was so interested, and this was such a relief
from the trudging anxiety of her search for work,
that she went on for a whole week as if she was still
living at home. Then a third secretarial opening
occurred and renewed her hopes again: a position
as amanuensis with which some of the lighter
duties of a nurse were combined to an infirm
gentleman of means living at Twickenham, and engaged
upon a great literary research to prove that the “Faery
Queen” was really a treatise upon molecular
chemistry written in a peculiar and picturesquely handled
cipher.
Part 2
Now, while Ann Veronica was taking
these soundings in the industrial sea, and measuring
herself against the world as it is, she was also making
extensive explorations among the ideas and attitudes
of a number of human beings who seemed to be largely
concerned with the world as it ought to be. She
was drawn first by Miss Miniver, and then by her own
natural interest, into a curious stratum of people
who are busied with dreams of world progress, of great
and fundamental changes, of a New Age that is to replace
all the stresses and disorders of contemporary life.
Miss Miniver learned of her flight
and got her address from the Widgetts. She arrived
about nine o’clock the next evening in a state
of tremulous enthusiasm. She followed the landlady
half way up-stairs, and called up to Ann Veronica,
“May I come up? It’s me! You
know Nettie Miniver!” She appeared
before Ann Veronica could clearly recall who Nettie
Miniver might be.
There was a wild light in her eye,
and her straight hair was out demonstrating and suffragetting
upon some independent notions of its own. Her
fingers were bursting through her gloves, as if to
get at once into touch with Ann Veronica. “You’re
Glorious!” said Miss Miniver in tones of rapture,
holding a hand in each of hers and peering up into
Ann Veronica’s face. “Glorious!
You’re so calm, dear, and so resolute, so serene!
“It’s girls like you who
will show them what We are,” said Miss Miniver;
“girls whose spirits have not been broken!”
Ann Veronica sunned herself a little in this warmth.
“I was watching you at Morningside
Park, dear,” said Miss Miniver. “I
am getting to watch all women. I thought then
perhaps you didn’t care, that you were like
so many of them. Now it’s just as though
you had grown up suddenly.”
She stopped, and then suggested:
“I wonder I should love if
it was anything I said.”
She did not wait for Ann Veronica’s
reply. She seemed to assume that it must certainly
be something she had said. “They all catch
on,” she said. “It spreads like wildfire.
This is such a grand time! Such a glorious time!
There never was such a time as this! Everything
seems so close to fruition, so coming on and leading
on! The Insurrection of Women! They spring
up everywhere. Tell me all that happened, one
sister-woman to another.”
She chilled Ann Veronica a little
by that last phrase, and yet the magnetism of her
fellowship and enthusiasm was very strong; and it was
pleasant to be made out a heroine after so much expostulation
and so many secret doubts.
But she did not listen long; she wanted
to talk. She sat, crouched together, by the corner
of the hearthrug under the bookcase that supported
the pig’s skull, and looked into the fire and
up at Ann Veronica’s face, and let herself go.
“Let us put the lamp out,” she said; “the
flames are ever so much better for talking,”
and Ann Veronica agreed. “You are coming
right out into life facing it all.”
Ann Veronica sat with her chin on
her hand, red-lit and saying little, and Miss Miniver
discoursed. As she talked, the drift and significance
of what she was saying shaped itself slowly to Ann
Veronica’s apprehension. It presented itself
in the likeness of a great, gray, dull world a
brutal, superstitious, confused, and wrong-headed world,
that hurt people and limited people unaccountably.
In remote times and countries its evil tendencies
had expressed themselves in the form of tyrannies,
massacres, wars, and what not; but just at present
in England they shaped as commercialism and competition,
silk hats, suburban morals, the sweating system, and
the subjection of women. So far the thing was
acceptable enough. But over against the world
Miss Miniver assembled a small but energetic minority,
the Children of Light people she described
as “being in the van,” or “altogether
in the van,” about whom Ann Veronica’s
mind was disposed to be more sceptical.
Everything, Miss Miniver said, was
“working up,” everything was “coming
on” the Higher Thought, the Simple
Life, Socialism, Humanitarianism, it was all the same
really. She loved to be there, taking part in
it all, breathing it, being it. Hitherto in the
world’s history there had been precursors of
this Progress at great intervals, voices that had spoken
and ceased, but now it was all coming on together in
a rush. She mentioned, with familiar respect,
Christ and Buddha and Shelley and Nietzsche and Plato.
Pioneers all of them. Such names shone brightly
in the darkness, with black spaces of unilluminated
emptiness about them, as stars shine in the night;
but now now it was different; now it was
dawn the real dawn.
“The women are taking it up,”
said Miss Miniver; “the women and the common
people, all pressing forward, all roused.”
Ann Veronica listened with her eyes on the fire.
“Everybody is taking it up,”
said Miss Miniver. “You had to come
in. You couldn’t help it. Something
drew you. Something draws everybody. From
suburbs, from country towns everywhere.
I see all the Movements. As far as I can, I belong
to them all. I keep my finger on the pulse of
things.”
Ann Veronica said nothing.
“The dawn!” said Miss
Miniver, with her glasses reflecting the fire like
pools of blood-red flame.
“I came to London,” said
Ann Veronica, “rather because of my own difficulty.
I don’t know that I understand altogether.”
“Of course you don’t,”
said Miss Miniver, gesticulating triumphantly with
her thin hand and thinner wrist, and patting Ann Veronica’s
knee. “Of course you don’t.
That’s the wonder of it. But you will, you
will. You must let me take you to things to
meetings and things, to conferences and talks.
Then you will begin to see. You will begin to
see it all opening out. I am up to the ears in
it all every moment I can spare. I
throw up work everything! I just teach
in one school, one good school, three days a week.
All the rest Movements! I can live
now on fourpence a day. Think how free that leaves
me to follow things up! I must take you everywhere.
I must take you to the Suffrage people, and the Tolstoyans,
and the Fabians.”
“I have heard of the Fabians,” said Ann
Veronica.
“It’s the Society!”
said Miss Miniver. “It’s the centre
of the intellectuals. Some of the meetings are
wonderful! Such earnest, beautiful women!
Such deep-browed men!... And to think that there
they are making history! There they are putting
together the plans of a new world. Almos light-heartedly.
There is Shaw, and Webb, and Wilkins the author, and
Toomer, and Doctor Tumpany the most wonderful
people! There you see them discussing, deciding,
planning! Just think they are
making A new world!”
“But are these people going
to alter everything?” said Ann Veronica.
“What else can happen?”
asked Miss Miniver, with a little weak gesture at
the glow. “What else can possibly happen as
things are going now?”
Part 3
Miss Miniver let Ann Veronica into
her peculiar levels of the world with so enthusiastic
a generosity that it seemed ingratitude to remain
critical. Indeed, almost insensibly Ann Veronica
became habituated to the peculiar appearance and the
peculiar manners of the people “in the van.”
The shock of their intellectual attitude was over,
usage robbed it of the first quaint effect of deliberate
unreason. They were in many respects so right;
she clung to that, and shirked more and more the paradoxical
conviction that they were also somehow, and even in
direct relation to that rightness, absurd.
Very central in Miss Miniver’s
universe were the Goopes. The Goopes were the
oddest little couple conceivable, following a fruitarian
career upon an upper floor in Theobald’s Road.
They were childless and servantless, and they had
reduced simple living to the finest of fine arts.
Mr. Goopes, Ann Veronica gathered, was a mathematical
tutor and visited schools, and his wife wrote a weekly
column in New Ideas upon vegetarian cookery, vivisection,
degeneration, the lacteal secretion, appendicitis,
and the Higher Thought generally, and assisted in the
management of a fruit shop in the Tottenham Court
Road. Their very furniture had mysteriously a
high-browed quality, and Mr. Goopes when at home dressed
simply in a pajama-shaped suit of canvas sacking tied
with brown ribbons, while his wife wore a purple djibbah
with a richly embroidered yoke. He was a small,
dark, reserved man, with a large inflexible-looking
convex forehead, and his wife was very pink and high-spirited,
with one of those chins that pass insensibly into a
full, strong neck. Once a week, every Saturday,
they had a little gathering from nine till the small
hours, just talk and perhaps reading aloud and fruitarian
refreshments chestnut sandwiches buttered
with nut tose, and so forth and lemonade
and unfermented wine; and to one of these symposia
Miss Miniver after a good deal of preliminary solicitude,
conducted Ann Veronica.
She was introduced, perhaps a little
too obviously for her taste, as a girl who was standing
out against her people, to a gathering that consisted
of a very old lady with an extremely wrinkled skin
and a deep voice who was wearing what appeared to
Ann Veronica’s inexperienced eye to be an antimacassar
upon her head, a shy, blond young man with a narrow
forehead and glasses, two undistinguished women in
plain skirts and blouses, and a middle-aged couple,
very fat and alike in black, Mr. and Mrs. Alderman
Dunstable, of the Borough Council of Marylebone.
These were seated in an imperfect semicircle about
a very copper-adorned fireplace, surmounted by a carved
wood inscription:
“Do it now.”
And to them were presently added a
roguish-looking young man, with reddish hair, an orange
tie, and a fluffy tweed suit, and others who, in Ann
Veronica’s memory, in spite of her efforts to
recall details, remained obstinately just “others.”
The talk was animated, and remained
always brilliant in form even when it ceased to be
brilliant in substance. There were moments when
Ann Veronica rather more than suspected the chief
speakers to be, as school-boys say, showing off at
her.
They talked of a new substitute for
dripping in vegetarian cookery that Mrs. Goopes was
convinced exercised an exceptionally purifying influence
on the mind. And then they talked of Anarchism
and Socialism, and whether the former was the exact
opposite of the latter or only a higher form.
The reddish-haired young man contributed allusions
to the Hegelian philosophy that momentarily confused
the discussion. Then Alderman Dunstable, who
had hitherto been silent, broke out into speech and
went off at a tangent, and gave his personal impressions
of quite a number of his fellow-councillors.
He continued to do this for the rest of the evening
intermittently, in and out, among other topics.
He addressed himself chiefly to Goopes, and spoke
as if in reply to long-sustained inquiries on the
part of Goopes into the personnel of the Marylebone
Borough Council. “If you were to ask me,”
he would say, “I should say Blinders is straight.
An ordinary type, of course ”
Mrs. Dunstable’s contributions
to the conversation were entirely in the form of nods;
whenever Alderman Dunstable praised or blamed she nodded
twice or thrice, according to the requirements of his
emphasis. And she seemed always to keep one eye
on Ann Veronica’s dress. Mrs. Goopes disconcerted
the Alderman a little by abruptly challenging the
roguish-looking young man in the orange tie (who, it
seemed, was the assistant editor of New Ideas) upon
a critique of Nietzsche and Tolstoy that had appeared
in his paper, in which doubts had been cast upon the
perfect sincerity of the latter. Everybody seemed
greatly concerned about the sincerity of Tolstoy.
Miss Miniver said that if once she
lost her faith in Tolstoy’s sincerity, nothing
she felt would really matter much any more, and she
appealed to Ann Veronica whether she did not feel the
same; and Mr. Goopes said that we must distinguish
between sincerity and irony, which was often indeed
no more than sincerity at the sublimated level.
Alderman Dunstable said that sincerity
was often a matter of opportunity, and illustrated
the point to the fair young man with an anecdote about
Blinders on the Dust Destructor Committee, during which
the young man in the orange tie succeeded in giving
the whole discussion a daring and erotic flavor by
questioning whether any one could be perfectly sincere
in love.
Miss Miniver thought that there was
no true sincerity except in love, and appealed to
Ann Veronica, but the young man in the orange tie went
on to declare that it was quite possible to be sincerely
in love with two people at the same time, although
perhaps on different planes with each individual,
and deceiving them both. But that brought Mrs.
Goopes down on him with the lesson Titian teaches
so beautifully in his “Sacred and Profane Love,”
and became quite eloquent upon the impossibility of
any deception in the former.
Then they discoursed on love for a
time, and Alderman Dunstable, turning back to the
shy, blond young man and speaking in undertones of
the utmost clearness, gave a brief and confidential
account of an unfounded rumor of the bifurcation of
the affections of Blinders that had led to a situation
of some unpleasantness upon the Borough Council.
The very old lady in the antimacassar
touched Ann Veronica’s arm suddenly, and said,
in a deep, arch voice:
“Talking of love again; spring
again, love again. Oh! you young people!”
The young man with the orange tie,
in spite of Sisyphus-like efforts on the part of Goopes
to get the topic on to a higher plane, displayed great
persistence in speculating upon the possible distribution
of the affections of highly developed modern types.
The old lady in the antimacassar said,
abruptly, “Ah! you young people, you young people,
if you only knew!” and then laughed and then
mused in a marked manner; and the young man with the
narrow forehead and glasses cleared his throat and
asked the young man in the orange tie whether he believed
that Platonic love was possible. Mrs. Goopes said
she believed in nothing else, and with that she glanced
at Ann Veronica, rose a little abruptly, and directed
Goopes and the shy young man in the handing of refreshments.
But the young man with the orange
tie remained in his place, disputing whether the body
had not something or other which he called its legitimate
claims. And from that they came back by way of
the Kreutzer Sonata and Resurrection to Tolstoy again.
So the talk went on. Goopes,
who had at first been a little reserved, resorted
presently to the Socratic method to restrain the young
man with the orange tie, and bent his forehead over
him, and brought out at last very clearly from him
that the body was only illusion and everything nothing
but just spirit and molecules of thought. It became
a sort of duel at last between them, and all the others
sat and listened every one, that is, except
the Alderman, who had got the blond young man into
a corner by the green-stained dresser with the aluminum
things, and was sitting with his back to every one
else, holding one hand over his mouth for greater
privacy, and telling him, with an accent of confidential
admission, in whispers of the chronic struggle between
the natural modesty and general inoffensiveness of
the Borough Council and the social evil in Marylebone.
So the talk went on, and presently
they were criticising novelists, and certain daring
essays of Wilkins got their due share of attention,
and then they were discussing the future of the theatre.
Ann Veronica intervened a little in the novelist discussion
with a defence of Esmond and a denial that the Egoist
was obscure, and when she spoke every one else stopped
talking and listened. Then they deliberated whether
Bernard Shaw ought to go into Parliament. And
that brought them to vegetarianism and teetotalism,
and the young man in the orange tie and Mrs. Goopes
had a great set-to about the sincerity of Chesterton
and Belloc that was ended by Goopes showing signs
of resuming the Socratic method.
And at last Ann Veronica and Miss
Miniver came down the dark staircase and out into
the foggy spaces of the London squares, and crossed
Russell Square, Woburn Square, Gordon Square, making
an oblique route to Ann Veronica’s lodging.
They trudged along a little hungry, because of the
fruitarian refreshments, and mentally very active.
And Miss Miniver fell discussing whether Goopes or
Bernard Shaw or Tolstoy or Doctor Tumpany or Wilkins
the author had the more powerful and perfect mind in
existence at the present time. She was clear there
were no other minds like them in all the world.
Part 4
Then one evening Ann Veronica went
with Miss Miniver into the back seats of the gallery
at Essex Hall, and heard and saw the giant leaders
of the Fabian Society who are re-making the world:
Bernard Shaw and Toomer and Doctor Tumpany and Wilkins
the author, all displayed upon a platform. The
place was crowded, and the people about her were almost
equally made up of very good-looking and enthusiastic
young people and a great variety of Goopes-like types.
In the discussion there was the oddest mixture of
things that were personal and petty with an idealist
devotion that was fine beyond dispute. In nearly
every speech she heard was the same implication of
great and necessary changes in the world changes
to be won by effort and sacrifice indeed, but surely
to be won. And afterward she saw a very much
larger and more enthusiastic gathering, a meeting
of the advanced section of the woman movement in Caxton
Hall, where the same note of vast changes in progress
sounded; and she went to a soiree of the Dress Reform
Association and visited a Food Reform Exhibition,
where imminent change was made even alarmingly visible.
The women’s meeting was much more charged with
emotional force than the Socialists’. Ann
Veronica was carried off her intellectual and critical
feet by it altogether, and applauded and uttered cries
that subsequent reflection failed to endorse.
“I knew you would feel it,” said Miss
Miniver, as they came away flushed and heated.
“I knew you would begin to see how it all falls
into place together.”
It did begin to fall into place together.
She became more and more alive, not so much to a system
of ideas as to a big diffused impulse toward change,
to a great discontent with and criticism of life as
it is lived, to a clamorous confusion of ideas for
reconstruction reconstruction of the methods
of business, of economic development, of the rules
of property, of the status of children, of the clothing
and feeding and teaching of every one; she developed
a quite exaggerated consciousness of a multitude of
people going about the swarming spaces of London with
their minds full, their talk and gestures full, their
very clothing charged with the suggestion of the urgency
of this pervasive project of alteration. Some
indeed carried themselves, dressed themselves even,
rather as foreign visitors from the land of “Looking
Backward” and “News from Nowhere”
than as the indigenous Londoners they were. For
the most part these were detached people: men
practising the plastic arts, young writers, young men
in employment, a very large proportion of girls and
women self-supporting women or girls of
the student class. They made a stratum into which
Ann Veronica was now plunged up to her neck; it had
become her stratum.
None of the things they said and did
were altogether new to Ann Veronica, but now she got
them massed and alive, instead of by glimpses or in
books alive and articulate and insistent.
The London backgrounds, in Bloomsbury and Marylebone,
against which these people went to and fro, took on,
by reason of their gray façades, their implacably
respectable windows and window-blinds, their reiterated
unmeaning iron railings, a stronger and stronger suggestion
of the flavor of her father at his most obdurate phase,
and of all that she felt herself fighting against.
She was already a little prepared
by her discursive reading and discussion under the
Widgett influence for ideas and “movements,”
though temperamentally perhaps she was rather disposed
to resist and criticise than embrace them. But
the people among whom she was now thrown through the
social exertions of Miss Miniver and the Widgetts for
Teddy and Hetty came up from Morningside Park and
took her to an eighteen-penny dinner in Soho and introduced
her to some art students, who were also Socialists,
and so opened the way to an evening of meandering talk
in a studio carried with them like an atmosphere
this implication, not only that the world was in some
stupid and even obvious way wrong, with which
indeed she was quite prepared to agree, but that it
needed only a few pioneers to behave as such and be
thoroughly and indiscriminately “advanced,”
for the new order to achieve itself.
When ninety per cent. out of the ten
or twelve people one meets in a month not only say
but feel and assume a thing, it is very hard not to
fall into the belief that the thing is so. Imperceptibly
almost Ann Veronica began to acquire the new attitude,
even while her mind still resisted the felted ideas
that went with it. And Miss Miniver began to
sway her.
The very facts that Miss Miniver never
stated an argument clearly, that she was never embarrassed
by a sense of self-contradiction, and had little more
respect for consistency of statement than a washerwoman
has for wisps of vapor, which made Ann Veronica critical
and hostile at their first encounter in Morningside
Park, became at last with constant association the
secret of Miss Miniver’s growing influence.
The brain tires of resistance, and when it meets again
and again, incoherently active, the same phrases,
the same ideas that it has already slain, exposed
and dissected and buried, it becomes less and less
energetic to repeat the operation. There must
be something, one feels, in ideas that achieve persistently
a successful resurrection. What Miss Miniver would
have called the Higher Truth supervenes.
Yet through these talks, these meetings
and conferences, these movements and efforts, Ann
Veronica, for all that she went with her friend, and
at times applauded with her enthusiastically, yet went
nevertheless with eyes that grew more and more puzzled,
and fine eyebrows more and more disposed to knit.
She was with these movements akin to them,
she felt it at times intensely and yet
something eluded her. Morningside Park had been
passive and defective; all this rushed about and was
active, but it was still defective. It still
failed in something. It did seem germane to the
matter that so many of the people “in the van”
were plain people, or faded people, or tired-looking
people. It did affect the business that they
all argued badly and were egotistical in their manners
and inconsistent in their phrases. There were
moments when she doubted whether the whole mass of
movements and societies and gatherings and talks was
not simply one coherent spectacle of failure protecting
itself from abjection by the glamour of its own assertions.
It happened that at the extremest point of Ann Veronica’s
social circle from the Widgetts was the family of
the Morningside Park horse-dealer, a company of extremely
dressy and hilarious young women, with one equestrian
brother addicted to fancy waistcoats, cigars, and facial
spots. These girls wore hats at remarkable angles
and bows to startle and kill; they liked to be right
on the spot every time and up to everything that was
it from the very beginning and they rendered their
conception of Socialists and all reformers by the
words “positively frightening” and “weird.”
Well, it was beyond dispute that these words did convey
a certain quality of the Movements in general amid
which Miss Miniver disported herself. They were
weird. And yet for all that
It got into Ann Veronica’s nights
at last and kept her awake, the perplexing contrast
between the advanced thought and the advanced thinker.
The general propositions of Socialism, for example,
struck her as admirable, but she certainly did not
extend her admiration to any of its exponents.
She was still more stirred by the idea of the equal
citizenship of men and women, by the realization that
a big and growing organization of women were giving
form and a generalized expression to just that personal
pride, that aspiration for personal freedom and respect
which had brought her to London; but when she heard
Miss Miniver discoursing on the next step in the suffrage
campaign, or read of women badgering Cabinet Ministers,
padlocked to railings, or getting up in a public meeting
to pipe out a demand for votes and be carried out kicking
and screaming, her soul revolted. She could not
part with dignity. Something as yet unformulated
within her kept her estranged from all these practical
aspects of her beliefs.
“Not for these things, O Ann
Veronica, have you revolted,” it said; “and
this is not your appropriate purpose.”
It was as if she faced a darkness
in which was something very beautiful and wonderful
as yet unimagined. The little pucker in her brows
became more perceptible.
Part 5
In the beginning of December Ann Veronica
began to speculate privately upon the procedure of
pawning. She had decided that she would begin
with her pearl necklace. She spent a very disagreeable
afternoon and evening it was raining fast
outside, and she had very unwisely left her soundest
pair of boots in the boothole of her father’s
house in Morningside Park thinking over
the economic situation and planning a course of action.
Her aunt had secretly sent on to Ann Veronica some
new warm underclothing, a dozen pairs of stockings,
and her last winter’s jacket, but the dear lady
had overlooked those boots.
These things illuminated her situation
extremely. Finally she decided upon a step that
had always seemed reasonable to her, but that hitherto
she had, from motives too faint for her to formulate,
refrained from taking. She resolved to go into
the City to Ramage and ask for his advice. And
next morning she attired herself with especial care
and neatness, found his address in the Directory at
a post-office, and went to him.
She had to wait some minutes in an
outer office, wherein three young men of spirited
costume and appearance regarded her with ill-concealed
curiosity and admiration. Then Ramage appeared
with effusion, and ushered her into his inner apartment.
The three young men exchanged expressive glances.
The inner apartment was rather gracefully
furnished with a thick, fine Turkish carpet, a good
brass fender, a fine old bureau, and on the walls
were engravings of two young girls’ heads by
Greuze, and of some modern picture of boys bathing
in a sunlit pool.
“But this is a surprise!”
said Ramage. “This is wonderful! I’ve
been feeling that you had vanished from my world.
Have you been away from Morningside Park?”
“I’m not interrupting you?”
“You are. Splendidly.
Business exists for such interruptions. There
you are, the best client’s chair.”
Ann Veronica sat down, and Ramage’s
eager eyes feasted on her.
“I’ve been looking out for you,”
he said. “I confess it.”
She had not, she reflected, remembered how prominent
his eyes were.
“I want some advice,” said Ann Veronica.
“Yes?”
“You remember once, how we talked at
a gate on the Downs? We talked about how a girl
might get an independent living.”
“Yes, yes.”
“Well, you see, something has happened at home.”
She paused.
“Nothing has happened to Mr. Stanley?”
“I’ve fallen out with
my father. It was about a question
of what I might do or might not do. He In
fact, he he locked me in my room.
Practically.”
Her breath left her for a moment.
“I say!” said Mr. Ramage.
“I wanted to go to an art-student ball of which
he disapproved.”
“And why shouldn’t you?”
“I felt that sort of thing couldn’t
go on. So I packed up and came to
London next day.”
“To a friend?”
“To lodgings alone.”
“I say, you know, you have some pluck.
You did it on your own?”
Ann Veronica smiled. “Quite on my own,”
she said.
“It’s magnificent!”
He leaned back and regarded her with his head a little
on one side. “By Jove!” he said, “there
is something direct about you. I wonder if I
should have locked you up if I’d been your father.
Luckily I’m not. And you started out forthwith
to fight the world and be a citizen on your own basis?”
He came forward again and folded his hands under him
on his desk.
“How has the world taken it?”
he asked. “If I was the world I think I
should have put down a crimson carpet, and asked you
to say what you wanted, and generally walk over me.
But the world didn’t do that.”
“Not exactly.”
“It presented a large impenetrable
back, and went on thinking about something else.”
“It offered from fifteen to
two-and-twenty shillings a week for drudgery.”
“The world has no sense of what
is due to youth and courage. It never has had.”
“Yes,” said Ann Veronica.
“But the thing is, I want a job.”
“Exactly! And so you came
along to me. And you see, I don’t turn my
back, and I am looking at you and thinking about you
from top to toe.”
“And what do you think I ought to do?”
“Exactly!” He lifted a
paper-weight and dabbed it gently down again.
“What ought you to do?”
“I’ve hunted up all sorts of things.”
“The point to note is that fundamentally
you don’t want particularly to do it.”
“I don’t understand.”
“You want to be free and so
forth, yes. But you don’t particularly
want to do the job that sets you free for
its own sake. I mean that it doesn’t interest
you in itself.”
“I suppose not.”
“That’s one of our differences.
We men are like children. We can get absorbed
in play, in games, in the business we do. That’s
really why we do them sometimes rather well and get
on. But women women as a rule don’t
throw themselves into things like that. As a matter
of fact it isn’t their affair. And as a
natural consequence, they don’t do so well,
and they don’t get on and so the world
doesn’t pay them. They don’t catch
on to discursive interests, you see, because they are
more serious, they are concentrated on the central
reality of life, and a little impatient of its its
outer aspects. At least that, I think, is what
makes a clever woman’s independent career so
much more difficult than a clever man’s.”
“She doesn’t develop a
specialty.” Ann Veronica was doing her best
to follow him.
“She has one, that’s why.
Her specialty is the central thing in life, it is
life itself, the warmth of life, sex and
love.”
He pronounced this with an air of
profound conviction and with his eyes on Ann Veronica’s
face. He had an air of having told her a deep,
personal secret. She winced as he thrust the fact
at her, was about to answer, and checked herself.
She colored faintly.
“That doesn’t touch the
question I asked you,” she said. “It
may be true, but it isn’t quite what I have
in mind.”
“Of course not,” said
Ramage, as one who rouses himself from deep preoccupations
And he began to question her in a business-like way
upon the steps she had taken and the inquiries she
had made. He displayed none of the airy optimism
of their previous talk over the downland gate.
He was helpful, but gravely dubious. “You
see,” he said, “from my point of view
you’re grown up you’re as old
as all the goddesses and the contemporary of any man
alive. But from the the economic point
of view you’re a very young and altogether inexperienced
person.”
He returned to and developed that
idea. “You’re still,” he said,
“in the educational years. From the point
of view of most things in the world of employment
which a woman can do reasonably well and earn a living
by, you’re unripe and half-educated. If
you had taken your degree, for example.”
He spoke of secretarial work, but
even there she would need to be able to do typing
and shorthand. He made it more and more evident
to her that her proper course was not to earn a salary
but to accumulate equipment. “You see,”
he said, “you are like an inaccessible gold-mine
in all this sort of matter. You’re splendid
stuff, you know, but you’ve got nothing ready
to sell. That’s the flat business situation.”
He thought. Then he slapped his
hand on his desk and looked up with the air of a man
struck by a brilliant idea. “Look here,”
he said, protruding his eyes; “why get anything
to do at all just yet? Why, if you must be free,
why not do the sensible thing? Make yourself worth
a decent freedom. Go on with your studies at the
Imperial College, for example, get a degree, and make
yourself good value. Or become a thorough-going
typist and stenographer and secretarial expert.”
“But I can’t do that.”
“Why not?”
“You see, if I do go home my
father objects to the College, and as for typing ”
“Don’t go home.”
“Yes, but you forget; how am I to live?”
“Easily. Easily.... Borrow....
From me.”
“I couldn’t do that,” said Ann Veronica,
sharply.
“I see no reason why you shouldn’t.”
“It’s impossible.”
“As one friend to another.
Men are always doing it, and if you set up to be a
man ”
“No, it’s absolutely out
of the question, Mr. Ramage.” And Ann Veronica’s
face was hot.
Ramage pursed his rather loose lips
and shrugged his shoulders, with his eyes fixed steadily
upon her. “Well anyhow I don’t
see the force of your objection, you know. That’s
my advice to you. Here I am. Consider you’ve
got resources deposited with me. Perhaps at the
first blush it strikes you as odd.
People are brought up to be so shy about money.
As though it was indelicate it’s
just a sort of shyness. But here I am to draw
upon. Here I am as an alternative either to nasty
work or going home.”
“It’s very kind of you ”
began Ann Veronica.
“Not a bit. Just a friendly
polite suggestion. I don’t suggest any
philanthropy. I shall charge you five per cent.,
you know, fair and square.”
Ann Veronica opened her lips quickly
and did not speak. But the five per cent. certainly
did seem to improve the aspect of Ramage’s suggestion.
“Well, anyhow, consider it open.”
He dabbed with his paper-weight again, and spoke in
an entirely indifferent tone. “And now tell
me, please, how you eloped from Morningside Park.
How did you get your luggage out of the house?
Wasn’t it wasn’t it rather in
some respects rather a lark? It’s
one of my regrets for my lost youth. I never ran
away from anywhere with anybody anywhen. And
now I suppose I should be considered too
old. I don’t feel it.... Didn’t
you feel rather eventful in the train coming
up to Waterloo?”
Part 6
Before Christmas Ann Veronica had
gone to Ramage again and accepted this offer she had
at first declined.
Many little things had contributed
to that decision. The chief influence was her
awakening sense of the need of money. She had
been forced to buy herself that pair of boots and
a walking-skirt, and the pearl necklace at the pawnbrokers’
had yielded very disappointingly. And, also, she
wanted to borrow that money. It did seem in so
many ways exactly what Ramage said it was the
sensible thing to do. There it was to
be borrowed. It would put the whole adventure
on a broader and better footing; it seemed, indeed,
almost the only possible way in which she might emerge
from her rebellion with anything like success.
If only for the sake of her argument with her home,
she wanted success. And why, after all, should
she not borrow money from Ramage?
It was so true what he said; middle-class
people were ridiculously squeamish about money.
Why should they be?
She and Ramage were friends, very
good friends. If she was in a position to help
him she would help him; only it happened to be the
other way round. He was in a position to help
her. What was the objection?
She found it impossible to look her
own diffidence in the face. So she went to Ramage
and came to the point almost at once.
“Can you spare me forty pounds?” she said.
Mr. Ramage controlled his expression and thought very
quickly.
“Agreed,” he said, “certainly,”
and drew a checkbook toward him.
“It’s best,” he said, “to
make it a good round sum.
“I won’t give you a check
though Yes, I will. I’ll give
you an uncrossed check, and then you can get it at
the bank here, quite close by.... You’d
better not have all the money on you; you had better
open a small account in the post-office and draw it
out a fiver at a time. That won’t involve
references, as a bank account would and
all that sort of thing. The money will last longer,
and it won’t bother you.”
He stood up rather close to her and
looked into her eyes. He seemed to be trying
to understand something very perplexing and elusive.
“It’s jolly,” he said, “to
feel you have come to me. It’s a sort of
guarantee of confidence. Last time you
made me feel snubbed.”
He hesitated, and went off at a tangent.
“There’s no end of things I’d like
to talk over with you. It’s just upon my
lunch-time. Come and have lunch with me.”
Ann Veronica fenced for a moment.
“I don’t want to take up your time.”
“We won’t go to any of
these City places. They’re just all men,
and no one is safe from scandal. But I know a
little place where we’ll get a little quiet
talk.”
Ann Veronica for some indefinable
reason did not want to lunch with him, a reason indeed
so indefinable that she dismissed it, and Ramage went
through the outer office with her, alert and attentive,
to the vivid interest of the three clerks. The
three clerks fought for the only window, and saw her
whisked into a hansom. Their subsequent conversation
is outside the scope of our story.
“Ritter’s!” said Ramage to the driver,
“Dean Street.”
It was rare that Ann Veronica used
hansoms, and to be in one was itself eventful and
exhilarating. She liked the high, easy swing of
the thing over its big wheels, the quick clatter-patter
of the horse, the passage of the teeming streets.
She admitted her pleasure to Ramage.
And Ritter’s, too, was very
amusing and foreign and discreet; a little rambling
room with a number of small tables, with red electric
light shades and flowers. It was an overcast
day, albeit not foggy, and the electric light shades
glowed warmly, and an Italian waiter with insufficient
English took Ramage’s orders, and waited with
an appearance of affection. Ann Veronica thought
the whole affair rather jolly. Ritter sold better
food than most of his compatriots, and cooked it better,
and Ramage, with a fine perception of a feminine palate,
ordered Vero Capri. It was, Ann Veronica felt,
as a sip or so of that remarkable blend warmed her
blood, just the sort of thing that her aunt would not
approve, to be lunching thus, tete-a-tete with a man;
and yet at the same time it was a perfectly innocent
as well as agreeable proceeding.
They talked across their meal in an
easy and friendly manner about Ann Veronica’s
affairs. He was really very bright and clever,
with a sort of conversational boldness that was just
within the limits of permissible daring. She
described the Goopes and the Fabians to him, and gave
him a sketch of her landlady; and he talked in the
most liberal and entertaining way of a modern young
woman’s outlook. He seemed to know a great
deal about life. He gave glimpses of possibilities.
He roused curiosities. He contrasted wonderfully
with the empty showing-off of Teddy. His friendship
seemed a thing worth having....
But when she was thinking it over
in her room that evening vague and baffling doubts
came drifting across this conviction. She doubted
how she stood toward him and what the restrained gleam
of his face might signify. She felt that perhaps,
in her desire to play an adequate part in the conversation,
she had talked rather more freely than she ought to
have done, and given him a wrong impression of herself.
Part 7
That was two days before Christmas
Eve. The next morning came a compact letter from
her father.
“My dear daughter,”
it ran, “Here, on the verge of the
season of forgiveness I hold out a last hand to you
in the hope of a reconciliation. I ask you, although
it is not my place to ask you, to return home.
This roof is still open to you. You will not be
taunted if you return and everything that can be done
will be done to make you happy.
“Indeed, I must implore you
to return. This adventure of yours has gone on
altogether too long; it has become a serious distress
to both your aunt and myself. We fail altogether
to understand your motives in doing what you are doing,
or, indeed, how you are managing to do it, or what
you are managing on. If you will think only of
one trifling aspect the inconvenience it
must be to us to explain your absence I
think you may begin to realize what it all means for
us. I need hardly say that your aunt joins with
me very heartily in this request.
“Please come home. You
will not find me unreasonable with you.
“Your affectionate
“Father.”
Ann Veronica sat over her fire with
her father’s note in her hand. “Queer
letters he writes,” she said. “I suppose
most people’s letters are queer. Roof open like
a Noah’s Ark. I wonder if he really wants
me to go home. It’s odd how little I know
of him, and of how he feels and what he feels.”
“I wonder how he treated Gwen.”
Her mind drifted into a speculation
about her sister. “I ought to look up Gwen,”
she said. “I wonder what happened.”
Then she fell to thinking about her
aunt. “I would like to go home,” she
cried, “to please her. She has been a dear.
Considering how little he lets her have.”
The truth prevailed. “The
unaccountable thing is that I wouldn’t go home
to please her. She is, in her way, a dear.
One ought to want to please her. And I don’t.
I don’t care. I can’t even make myself
care.”
Presently, as if for comparison with
her father’s letter, she got out Ramage’s
check from the box that contained her papers.
For so far she had kept it uncashed. She had
not even endorsed it.
“Suppose I chuck it,”
she remarked, standing with the mauve slip in her
hand “suppose I chuck it, and surrender
and go home! Perhaps, after all, Roddy was right!
“Father keeps opening the door
and shutting it, but a time will come
“I could still go home!”
She held Ramage’s check as if
to tear it across. “No,” she said
at last; “I’m a human being not
a timid female. What could I do at home?
The other’s a crumple-up just surrender.
Funk! I’ll see it out.”