In the morning, after breakfast, James
went for a walk. He wanted to think out clearly
what he had better do, feeling that he must make up
his mind at once. Hesitation would be fatal, and
yet to speak immediately seemed so cruel, so brutally
callous.
Wishing to be absolutely alone, he
wandered through the garden to a little wood of beech-trees,
which in his boyhood had been a favourite haunt.
The day was fresh and sweet after the happy rain of
April, the sky so clear that it affected one like
a very beautiful action.
James stood still when he came into
the wood, inhaling the odour of moist soil, the voluptuous
scents of our mother, the Earth, gravid with silent
life. For a moment he was intoxicated by the paradise
of verdure. The beech-trees rose very tall, with
their delicate branches singularly black amid the
young leaves of the spring, tender and vivid.
The eye could not pierce the intricate greenery; it
was more delicate than the summer rain, subtler than
the mists of the sunset. It was a scene to drive
away all thought of the sadness of life, of the bitterness.
Its exquisite fresh purity made James feel pure also,
and like a little child he wandered over the undulating
earth, broken by the tortuous courses of the streamlets
of winter.
The ground was soft, covered with
brown dead leaves, and he tried to see the rabbit
rustling among them, or the hasty springing of a squirrel.
The long branches of the briar entangled his feet;
and here and there, in sheltered corners, blossomed
the primrose and the violet He listened to the chant
of the birds, so joyous that it seemed impossible they
sang in a world of sorrow. Hidden among the leaves,
aloft in the beeches, the linnet sang with full-throated
melody, and the blackbird and the thrush. In
the distance a cuckoo called its mysterious note, and
far away, like an echo, a fellow-bird called back.
All Nature was rejoicing in the delight
of the sunshine; all Nature was rejoicing, and his
heart alone was heavy as lead. He stood by a
fir-tree, which rose far above the others, immensely
tall, like the mast of a solitary ship; it was straight
as a life without reproach, but cheerless, cold, and
silent. His life, too, was without reproach,
thought James-without reproach till now....
He had loved Mary Clibborn. But was it love,
or was it merely affection, habit, esteem? She
was the only girl he knew, and they had grown up together.
When he came from school for his holidays, or later
from Sandhurst, on leave, Mary was his constant friend,
without whom he would have been miserably dull.
She was masculine enough to enter into his boyish
games, and even their thoughts were common. There
were so few people in Little Primpton that those who
lived there saw one another continually; and though
Tunbridge Wells was only four miles away, the distance
effectually prevented very close intimacy with its
inhabitants. It was natural, then, that James
should only look forward to an existence in which
Mary took part; without that pleasant companionship
the road seemed long and dreary. When he was
appointed to a regiment in India, and his heart softened
at the prospect of the first long parting from all
he cared for, it was the separation from Mary that
seemed hardest to bear.
“I don’t know what I shall
do without you, Mary,” he said.
“You will forget all about us
when you’ve been in India a month.”
But her lips twitched, and he noticed
that she found difficulty in speaking quite firmly.
She hesitated a moment, and spoke again.
“It’s different for us,”
she said, “Those who go forget, but those who
stay-remember. We shall be always doing
the same things to remind us of you. Oh, you
won’t forget me, Jamie?”
The last words slipped out against the girl’s
intention.
“Mary!” he cried.
And then he put his arms round her,
and Mary rested her face on his shoulder and began
to cry. He kissed her, trying to stop her tears;
he pressed her to his heart. He really thought
he loved her then with all his strength.
“Mary,” he whispered, “Mary, do
you care for me? Will you marry me?”
Then quickly he explained that it
would make it so much better for both if they became
engaged.
“I shan’t be able to marry
you for a long time; but will you wait for me, Mary?”
She began to smile through her tears.
“I would wait for you to the end of my life.”
During the first two years in India
the tie had been to James entirely pleasurable; and
if, among the manifold experiences of his new life,
he bore Mary’s absence with greater equanimity
than he had thought possible, he was always glad to
receive her letters, with their delicate aroma of
the English country; and it pleased him to think that
his future was comfortably settled. The engagement
was a sort of ballast, and he felt that he could compass
his journey without fear and without disturbance.
James did not ask himself whether his passion was very
ardent, for his whole education had led him to believe
that passion was hardly moral. The proper and
decent basis of marriage was similarity of station,
and the good, solid qualities which might be supposed
endurable. From his youth, the wisdom of the world
had been instilled into him through many proverbs,
showing the advisability of caution, the transitoriness
of beauty and desire; and, on the other hand, the lasting
merit of honesty, virtue, domesticity, and good temper....
But we all know that Nature is a goddess
with no sense of decency, for whom the proprieties
are simply non-existent; men and women in her eyes
have but one point of interest, and she walks abroad,
with her fashioning fingers, setting in order the
only work she cares for. All the rest is subsidiary,
and she is callous to suffering and to death, indifferent
to the Ten Commandments and even to the code of Good
Society.
James at last made the acquaintance
of a certain Mrs. Pritchard-Wallace, the wife of a
man in a native regiment, a little, dark-hatred person,
with an olive skin and big brown eyes-rather
common, but excessively pretty. She was the daughter
of a riding-master by a Portuguese woman from Goa,
and it had been something of a scandal when Pritchard-Wallace,
who was an excellent fellow, had married her against
the advice of all the regimental ladies. But if
those charitable persons had not ceased to look upon
her with doubtful eyes, her wit and her good looks
for others counterbalanced every disadvantage; and
she did not fail to have a little court of subalterns
and the like hanging perpetually about her skirts.
At first Mrs. Wallace merely amused James. Her
absolute frivolity, her cynical tongue, her light-heartedness,
were a relief after the rather puritanical atmosphere
in which he had passed his youth; he was astonished
to hear the gay contempt which she poured upon all
the things that he had held most sacred-things
like the Tower of London and the British Constitution.
Prejudices and cherished beliefs were dissipated before
her sharp-tongued raillery; she was a woman with almost
a witty way of seeing the world, with a peculiarly
feminine gift for putting old things in a new, absurd
light. To Mrs. Wallace, James seemed a miracle
of ingenuousness, and she laughed at him continually;
then she began to like him, and took him about with
her, at which he was much flattered.
James had been brought up in the belief
that women were fashioned of different clay from men,
less gross, less earthly; he thought not only that
they were pious, sweet and innocent, ignorant entirely
of disagreeable things, but that it was man’s
first duty to protect them from all knowledge of the
realities of life. To him they were an ethereal
blending of milk-and-water with high principles; it
had never occurred to him that they were flesh and
blood, and sense, and fire and nerves-especially
nerves. Most topics, of course, could not be broached
in their presence; in fact, almost the only safe subject
of conversation was the weather.
But Mrs. Pritchard-Wallace prided
herself on frankness, which is less common in pretty
women than in plain; and she had no hesitation in
discussing with James matters that he had never heard
discussed before. She was hugely amused at the
embarrassment which made him hesitate and falter,
trying to find polite ways of expressing the things
which his whole training had taught him to keep rigidly
to himself. Then sometimes, from pure devilry,
Mrs. Wallace told stories on purpose to shock him;
and revelled in his forced, polite smile, and in his
strong look of disapproval.
“What a funny boy you are!”
she said. “But you must take care, you know;
you have all the makings of a perfect prig.”
“D’you think so?”
“You must try to be less moral.
The moral young man is rather funny for a change,
but he palls after a time.”
“If I bore you, you have only
to say so, and I won’t bother you again.”
“And moral young men shouldn’t
get cross; it’s very bad manners,” she
answered, smiling.
Before he knew what had happened,
James found himself madly in love with Mrs. Wallace.
But what a different passion was this, resembling not
at all that pallid flame which alone he had experienced!
How could he recognise the gentle mingling of friendship
and of common-sense which he called love in that destroying
violence which troubled his days like a fever?
He dreamed of the woman at night; he seemed only to
live when he was with her. The mention of her
name made his heart beat, and meeting her he trembled
and turned cold. By her side he found nothing
to say; he was like wax in her hands, without will
or strength. The touch of her fingers sent the
blood rushing through his veins insanely; and understanding
his condition, she took pleasure in touching him, to
watch the little shiver of desire that convulsed his
frame. In a very self-restrained man love works
ruinously; and it burnt James now, this invisible,
unconscious fire, till he was consumed utterly-till
he was mad with passion. And then suddenly, at
some chance word, he knew what had happened; he knew
that he was in love with the wife of his good friend,
Pritchard-Wallace; and he thought of Mary Clibborn.
There was no hesitation now, nor doubt;
James had only been in danger because he was unaware
of it. He never thought of treachery to his friend
or to Mary; he was horror-stricken, hating himself.
He looked over the brink of the precipice at the deadly
sin, and recoiled, shuddering. He bitterly reproached
himself, taking for granted that some error of his
had led to the catastrophe. But his duty was obvious;
he knew he must kill the sinful love, whatever pain
it cost him; he must crush it as he would some noxious
vermin.
James made up his mind never to see
Mrs. Wallace again; and he thought that God was on
his side helping him, since, with her husband, she
was leaving in a month for England. He applied
for leave. He could get away for a few weeks,
and on his return Mrs. Wallace would be gone.
He managed to avoid her for several days, but at last
she came across him by chance, and he could not escape.
“I didn’t know you were
so fond of hide-and-seek,” she said, “I
think it’s rather a stupid game.”
“I don’t understand,” replied James,
growing pale.
“Why have you been dodging round
corners to avoid me as if I were a dun, and inventing
the feeblest excuses not to come to me?”
James stood for a moment, not knowing
what to answer; his knees trembled, and he sweated
with the agony of his love. It was an angry,
furious passion, that made him feel he could almost
seize the woman by the throat and strangle her.
“Did you know that I am engaged
to be married?” he asked at length.
“I’ve never known a sub
who wasn’t. It’s the most objectionable
of all their vicious habits. What then?”
She looked at him, smiling; she knew very well the
power of her dark eyes, fringed with long lashes.
“Don’t be silly,” she added.
“Come and see me, and bring her photograph, and
you shall talk to me for two hours about her.
Will you come?”
“It’s very kind of you. I don’t
think I can.”
“Why not? You’re really very rude.”
“I’m extremely busy.”
“Nonsense! You must come.
Don’t look as if I were asking you to do something
quite horrible. I shall expect you to tea.”
She bound him by his word, and James
was forced to go. When he showed the photograph,
Mrs. Pritchard-Wallace looked at it with a curious
expression. It was the work of a country photographer,
awkward and ungainly, with the head stiffly poised,
and the eyes hard and fixed; the general impression
was ungraceful and devoid of charm, Mrs. Wallace noticed
the country fashion of her clothes.
“It’s extraordinary that
subalterns should always get engaged to the same sort
of girl.”
James flushed, “It’s not a very good one
of her.”
“They always photograph badly,” murmured
Mrs. Wallace.
“She’s the best girl in
the world. You can’t think how good, and
kind, and simple she is; she reminds me always of
an English breeze.”
“I don’t like east winds
myself,” said Mrs. Wallace. “But I
can see she has all sorts of admirable qualities.”
“D’you know why I came to see you to-day?”
“Because I forced you,” said Mrs. Wallace,
laughing.
“I came to say good-bye; I’ve got a month’s
leave.”
“Oh, but I shall be gone by the time you come
back.”
“I know. It is for that reason.”
Mrs. Wallace looked at him quickly, hesitated, then
glanced away.
“Is it so bad as that?”
“Oh, don’t you understand?”
cried James, breaking suddenly from his reserve.
“I must tell you. I shall never see you
again, and it can’t matter. I love you
with all my heart and soul. I didn’t know
what love was till I met you. God help me, it
was only friendship I had for Mary! This is so
different. Oh, I hate myself! I can’t
help it; the mere touch of your hand sends me mad
with passion. I daren’t see you again-I’m
not a blackguard. I know it’s quite hopeless.
And I’ve given my word to Mary.”
The look of her eyes, the sound of
her voice, sent half his fine intentions flying before
the wind. He lost command over himself-but
only for a moment; the old habits were strong.
“I beg your pardon! I oughtn’t
to have spoken. Don’t be angry with me
for what I’ve said. I couldn’t help
it. You thought me a fool because I ran away
from you. It was all I could do. I couldn’t
help loving you. You understand now, don’t
you? I know that you will never wish to see me
again, and it’s better for both of us. Good-bye.”
He stretched out his hand.
“I didn’t know it was
so bad as that,” she said, looking at him with
kindly eyes.
“Didn’t you see me tremble
when the hem of your dress touched me by accident?
Didn’t you hear that I couldn’t speak;
the words were dried up in my throat?” He sank
into a chair weakly; but then immediately gathering
himself together, sprang up. “Good-bye,”
he said. “Let me go quickly.”
She gave him her hand, and then, partly
in kindness, partly in malice, bent forward and kissed
his lips. James gave a cry, a sob; now he lost
command over himself entirely. He took her in
his arms roughly, and kissed her mouth, her eyes,
her hair-so passionately that Mrs. Wallace
was frightened. She tried to free herself; but
he only held her closer, madly kissing her lips.
“Take care,” she said.
“What are you doing? Let me go!” And
she pushed him away.
She was a cautious woman, who never
allowed flirtation to go beyond certain decorous lengths,
and she was used to a milder form of philandering.
“You’ve disarranged my
hair, you silly boy!” She went to the glass to
put it in order, and when she turned back found that
James had gone. “What an odd creature!”
she muttered.
To Mrs. Pritchard-Wallace the affair
was but an incident, such as might have been the love
of Phaedra had she flourished in an age when the art
of living consists in not taking things too seriously;
but for Hippolitus a tragedy of one sort or another
is inevitable. James was not a man of easy affections;
he made the acquaintance of people with a feeling
of hostility rather than with the more usual sensation
of friendly curiosity. He was shy, and even with
his best friends could not lessen his reserve.
Some persons are able to form close intimacies with
admirable facility, but James felt always between himself
and his fellows a sort of barrier. He could not
realise that deep and sudden sympathy was even possible,
and was apt to look with mistrust upon the appearance
thereof. He seemed frigid and perhaps supercilious
to those with whom he came in contact; he was forced
to go his way, hiding from all eyes the emotions he
felt. And when at last he fell passionately in
love, it meant to him ten times more than to most men;
it was a sudden freedom from himself. He was
like a prisoner who sees for the first time in his
life the trees and the hurrying clouds, and all the
various movement of the world. For a little while
James had known a wonderful liberty, an ineffable
bliss which coloured the whole universe with new,
strange colours. But then he learnt that the happiness
was only sin, and he returned voluntarily to his cold
prison.... Till he tried to crush it, he did
not know how strong was this passion; he did not realise
that it had made of him a different man; it was the
only thing in the world to him, beside which everything
else was meaningless. He became ruthless towards
himself, undergoing every torture which he fancied
might cleanse him of the deadly sin.
And when Mrs. Wallace, against his
will, forced herself upon his imagination, he tried
to remember her vulgarity, her underbred manners,
her excessive use of scent. She had merely played
with him, without thinking or caring what the result
to him might be. She was bent on as much enjoyment
as possible without exposing herself to awkward consequences;
common scandal told him that he was not the first callow
youth that she had entangled with her provoking glances
and her witty tongue. The epithet by which his
brother officers qualified her was expressive, though
impolite. James repeated these things a hundred
times: he said that Mrs. Wallace was not fit to
wipe Mary’s boots; he paraded before himself,
like a set of unread school-books, all Mary’s
excellent qualities. He recalled her simple piety,
her good-nature, and kindly heart; she had every attribute
that a man could possibly want in his wife. And
yet-and yet, when he slept he dreamed he
was talking to the other; all day her voice sang in
his ears, her gay smile danced before his eyes.
He remembered every word she had ever said; he remembered
the passionate kisses he had given her. How could
he forget that ecstasy? He writhed, trying to
expel the importunate image; but nothing served.
Time could not weaken the impression.
Since then he had never seen Mrs. Wallace, but the
thought of her was still enough to send the blood
racing through his veins. He had done everything
to kill the mad, hopeless passion; and always, like
a rank weed, it had thriven with greater strength.
James knew it was his duty to marry Mary Clibborn,
and yet he felt he would rather die. As the months
passed on, and he knew he must shortly see her, he
was never free from a sense of terrible anxiety.
Doubt came to him, and he could not drive it away.
The recollection of her was dim, cold, formless; his
only hope was that when he saw her love might rise
up again, and kill that other passion which made him
so utterly despise himself. But he had welcomed
the war as a respite, and the thought came to him
that its chances might easily solve the difficulty.
Then followed the months of hardship and of fighting;
and during these the image of Mrs. Wallace had been
less persistent, so that James fancied he was regaining
the freedom he longed for. And when he lay wounded
and ill, his absolute weariness made him ardently look
forward to seeing his people again. A hotter love
sprang up for them; and the hope became stronger that
reunion with Mary might awaken the dead emotion.
He wished for it with all his heart.
But he had seen Mary, and he felt
it hopeless; she left him cold, almost hostile.
And with a mocking laugh, James heard Mrs. Wallace’s
words:
“Subalterns always get engaged
to the same type of girl. They photograph so
badly.”
And now he did not know what to do.
The long recalling of the past had left James more
uncertain than ever. Some devil within him cried,
“Wait, wait! Something may happen!”
It really seemed better to let things slide a little.
Perhaps-who could tell?-in a
day or two the old habit might render Mary as dear
to him as when last he had wandered with her in that
green wood, James sighed, and looked about him....
The birds still sang merrily, the squirrel leaped
from tree to tree; even the blades of grass stood
with a certain conscious pleasure, as the light breeze
rustled through them. In the mid-day sun all
things took pleasure in their life; and all Nature
appeared full of joy, coloured and various and insouciant.
He alone was sad.