The tension between James and his
parents became not less, but greater. That barrier
which, almost from the beginning, they had watched
with pain rise up between them now seemed indestructible,
and all their efforts only made it more obvious and
more stable. It was like some tropical plant
which, for being cut down, grew ever with greater
luxuriance. And there was a mischievous devil
present at all their conversations that made them
misunderstand one another as completely as though
they spoke in different tongues. Notwithstanding
their love, they were like strangers together; they
could look at nothing from the same point of view.
The Parsons had lived their whole
lives in an artificial state. Ill-educated as
most of their contemporaries in that particular class,
they had just enough knowledge to render them dogmatic
and intolerant. It requires a good deal of information
to discover one’s own ignorance, but to the
consciousness of this the good people had never arrived.
They felt they knew as much as necessary, and naturally
on the most debatable questions were most assured.
Their standpoint was inconceivably narrow. They
had the best intentions in the world of doing their
duty, but what their duty was they accepted on trust,
frivolously. They walked round and round in a
narrow circle, hemmed in by false ideals and by ugly
prejudices, putting for the love of God unnecessary
obstacles in their path and convinced that theirs was
the only possible way, while all others led to damnation.
They had never worked out an idea for themselves,
never done a single deed on their own account, but
invariably acted and thought according to the rule
of their caste. They were not living creatures,
but dogmatic machines.
James, going into the world, quickly
realised that he had been brought up to a state of
things which did not exist. He was like a sailor
who has put out to sea in an ornamental boat, and
finds that his sail is useless, the ropes not made
to work, and the rudder immovable. The long,
buoyant wind of the world blew away like thistle-down
the conventions which had seemed so secure a foundation.
But he discovered in himself a wonderful curiosity,
an eagerness for adventure which led him boldly to
affront every peril; and the unknown lands of the intellect
are every bit as dangerously fascinating as are those
of sober fact. He read omnivorously, saw many
and varied things; the universe was spread out before
him like an enthralling play. Knowledge is like
the root of a tree, attaching man by its tendrils
to the life about him. James found in existence
new beauties, new interests, new complexities; and
he gained a lighter heart and, above all, an exquisite
sense of freedom. At length he looked back with
something like horror at that old life in which the
fetters of ignorance had weighed so terribly upon him.
On his return to Little Primpton,
he found his people as he had left them, doing the
same things, repeating at every well-known juncture
the same trite observations. Their ingenuousness
affected him as a negro, civilised and educated, on
visiting after many years his native tribe, might
be affected by their nose-rings and yellow ochre.
James was astounded that they should ignore matters
which he fancied common knowledge, and at the same
time accept beliefs that he had thought completely
dead. He was willing enough to shrug his shoulders
and humour their prejudices, but they had made of
them a rule of life which governed every action with
an iron tyranny. It was in accordance with all
these outworn conventions that they conducted the daily
round. And presently James found that his father
and mother were striving to draw him back into the
prison. Unconsciously, even with the greatest
tenderness, they sought to place upon his neck again
that irksome yoke which he had so difficultly thrown
off.
If James had learnt anything, it was
at all hazards to think for himself, accepting nothing
on authority, questioning, doubting; it was to look
upon life with a critical eye, trying to understand
it, and to receive no ready-made explanations.
Above all, he had learnt that every question has two
sides. Now this was precisely what Colonel Parsons
and his wife could never acknowledge; for them one
view was certainly right, and the other as certainly
wrong. There was no middle way. To doubt
what they believed could only be ascribed to arrant
folly or to wickedness. Sometimes James was thrown
into a blind rage by the complacency with which from
the depths of his nescience his father dogmatised.
No man could have been more unassuming than he, and
yet on just the points which were most uncertain his
attitude was almost inconceivably arrogant.
And James was horrified at the pettiness
and the prejudice which he found in his home.
Reading no books, for they thought it waste of time
to read, the minds of his father and mother had sunk
into such a narrow sluggishness that they could interest
themselves only in trivialities. Their thoughts
were occupied by their neighbours and the humdrum
details of the life about them. Flattering themselves
on their ideals and their high principles, they vegetated
in stupid sloth and in a less than animal vacuity.
Every topic of conversation above the most commonplace
they found dull or incomprehensible. James learned
that he had to talk to them almost as if they were
children, and the tedium of those endless days was
intolerable.
Occasionally he was exasperated that
he could not avoid the discussions which his father,
with a weak man’s obstinacy, forced upon him.
Some unhappy, baneful power seemed to drive Colonel
Parsons to widen the rift, the existence of which
caused him such exquisite pain; his natural kindliness
was obscured by an uncontrollable irritation.
One day he was reading the paper.
“I see we’ve had another
unfortunate reverse,” he said, looking up.
“Oh!”
“I suppose you’re delighted, Jamie?”
“I’m very sorry. Why should I be
otherwise?”
“You always stick up for the
enemies of your country.” Turning to his
brother-in-law, he explained: “James says
that if he’d been a Cape Dutchman he’d
have fought against us.”
“Well, he deserves to be court-martialled
for saying so! “cried Major Forsyth.
“I don’t think he means
to be taken seriously,” said his mother.
“Oh, yes, I do.”
It constantly annoyed James that when he said anything
that was not quite an obvious truism, they should think
he was speaking merely for effect. “Why,
my dear mother, if you’d been a Boer woman you’d
have potted at us from behind a haystack with the best
of them.”
“The Boers are robbers and brigands.”
“That’s just what they say we are.”
“But we’re right.”
“And they’re equally convinced that they
are.”
“God can’t be on both sides, James.”
“The odd thing is the certainty
with which both sides claim His exclusive protection.”
“I should think it wicked to
doubt that God is with us in a righteous war,”
said Mrs. Parsons.
“If the Boers weren’t
deceived by that old villain Kruger, they’d never
have fought us.”
“The Boers are strange people,”
replied James. “They actually prefer their
independence to all the privileges and advantages of
subjection.... The wonderful thing to me is that
people should really think Mr. Kruger a hypocrite.
A ruler who didn’t honestly believe in himself
and in his mission would never have had such influence.
If a man wants power he must have self-faith; but
then he may be narrow, intolerant, and vicious.
His fellows will be like wax in his hands.”
“If Kruger had been honest,
he wouldn’t have put up with bribery and corruption.”
“The last thing I expect is
consistency in an animal of such contrary instincts
as man.”
“Every true Englishman, I’m
thankful to say, thinks him a scoundrel and a blackguard.”
“In a hundred years he will
probably think him a patriot and a hero. In that
time the sentimental view will be the only one of interest;
and the sentimental view will put the Transvaal in
the same category as Poland.”
“You’re nothing better than a pro-Boer,
James.”
“I’m nothing of the kind;
but seeing how conflicting was current opinion, I
took some trouble to find for myself a justification
of the war. I couldn’t help wondering why
I went and killed people to whom I was personally
quite indifferent.”
“I hope because it was your
duty as an officer of Her Majesty the Queen.”
“Not exactly. I came to
the conclusion that I killed people because I liked
it. The fighting instinct is in my blood, and
I’m never so happy as when I’m shooting
things. Killing tigers is very good sport, but
it’s not in it with killing men. That is
my justification, so far as I personally am concerned.
As a member of society, I wage war for a different
reason. War is the natural instinct of all creatures;
not only do progress and civilisation arise from it,
but it is the very condition of existence. Men,
beasts, and plants are all in the same position:
unless they fight incessantly they’re wiped out;
there’s no sitting on one side and looking on....
When a state wants a neighbour’s land, it has
a perfect right to take it-if it can.
Success is its justification. We English wanted
the Transvaal for our greater numbers, for our trade,
for the continuance of our power; that was our right
to take it. The only thing that seems to me undignified
is the rather pitiful set of excuses we made up.”
“If those are your ideas, I
think they are utterly ignoble.”
“I believe they’re scientific.”
“D’you think men go to war for scientific
reasons?”
“No, of course not; they don’t
realise them. The great majority are incapable
of abstract ideas, but fortunately they’re emotional
and sentimental; and the pill can be gilded with high
falutin. It’s for them that the Union Jack
and the honour of Old England are dragged through
every newspaper and brandished in every music hall.
It’s for them that all these atrocities are
invented-most of them bunkum. Men are
only savages with a thin veneer of civilisation, which
is rather easily rubbed off, and then they act just
like Red Indians; but as a general rule they’re
well enough behaved. The Boer isn’t a bad
sort, and the Englishman isn’t a bad sort; but
there’s not room for both of them on the earth,
and one of them has to go.”
“My father fought for duty and
honour’s sake, and so fought his father before
him.”
“Men have always fought really
for the same reasons-for self-protection
and gain; but perhaps they have not seen quite so clearly
as now the truth behind all their big words.
The world and mankind haven’t altered suddenly
in the last few years.”
Afterwards, when Colonel Parsons and
his wife were alone together, and she saw that he
was brooding over his son’s words, she laid her
hand on his shoulder, and said:
“Don’t worry, Richmond;
it’ll come right in the end, if we trust and
pray.”
“I don’t know what to
make of him,” he returned, sadly shaking his
head. “It’s not our boy, Frances;
he couldn’t be callous and unscrupulous, and-dishonourable.
God forgive me for saying it!”
“Don’t be hard on him,
Richmond. I daresay he doesn’t mean all
he says. And remember that he’s been very
ill. He’s not himself yet.”
The Colonel sighed bitterly.
“When we looked forward so anxiously
to his return, we didn’t know that he would
be like this.”
James had gone out. He wandered
along the silent roads, taking in large breaths of
the fresh air, for his home affected him like a hot-house.
The atmosphere was close and heavy, so that he could
neither think freely nor see things in any reasonable
light. He felt sometimes as though a weight were
placed upon his head, that pressed him down, and pressed
him down till he seemed almost forced to his knees.
He blamed himself for his lack of
moderation. Why, remembering ever his father’s
unhappiness and his infirmities, could he not humour
him? He was an old man, weak and frail; it should
not have been so difficult to use restraint towards
him. James knew he had left them in Primpton House
distressed and angry; but the only way to please them
was to surrender his whole personality, giving up
to their bidding all his thoughts and all his actions.
They wished to exercise over him the most intolerable
of all tyrannies, the tyranny of love. It
was a heavy return they demanded for their affection
if he must abandon his freedom, body and soul; he
earnestly wished to make them happy, but that was too
hard a price to pay. And then, with sudden rage,
James asked himself why they should be so self-sufficiently
certain that they were right. What an outrageous
assumption it was that age must be infallible!
Their idea of filial duty was that he should accept
their authority, not because they were wise, but because
they were old. When he was a child they had insisted
on the utmost submission, and now they expected the
same submission-to their prejudice, intolerance,
and lack of knowledge. They had almost ridiculously
that calm, quiet, well-satisfied assurance which a
king by right divine might have in the certainty that
he could do no wrong.
And James, with bitter, painful scorn,
thought of that frightful blunder which had forced
Colonel Parsons to leave the service. At first
his belief in his father had been such that James
could not conceive the possibility even that he had
acted wrongly; the mere fact that his father had chosen
a certain course was proof of its being right and
proper, and the shame lay with his chief, who had used
him ill. But when he examined the affair and
thought over it, the truth became only too clear;
it came to him like a blow, and for a while he was
overcome with shame. The fact was evident-alas!
only too evident-his father was incapable
of command. James was simply astounded; he tried
not to hear the cruel words that buzzed in his ears,
but he could not help it-imbecility, crass
idiocy, madness. It was worse than madness, the
folly of it was almost criminal; he thought now that
his father had escaped very easily.
James hastened his step, trying to
rid himself of the irritating thoughts. He walked
along the fat and fertile Kentish fields, by the neat
iron railing with which they were enclosed. All
about him was visible the care of man. Nothing
was left wild. The trees were lopped into proper
shape, cut down where their presence seemed inelegant,
planted to complete the symmetry of a group. Nature
herself was under the power of the formal influence,
and flourished with a certain rigidity and decorum.
After a while the impression became singularly irksome;
it seemed to emphasise man’s lack of freedom,
reminding one of the iron conventions with which he
is inevitably bound. In the sun, the valley,
all green and wooded, was pleasantly cool; but when
the clouds rolled up from the west heavily, brushing
the surrounding hills, the aspect was so circumscribed
that James could have cried out as with physical pain.
The primness of the scene then was insufferable; the
sombre, well-ordered elms, the meadows so carefully
kept, seemed the garden of some great voluptuous prison,
and the air was close with servitude.
James panted for breath. He thought
of the vast distances of South Africa, bush and prairie
stretching illimitably, and above, the blue sky, vaster
still. There, at least, one could breathe freely,
and stretch one’s limbs.
“Why did I ever come back?” he cried.
The blood went thrilling through his
veins at the mere thought of those days in which every
minute had been intensely worth living. Then,
indeed, was no restraint or pettiness; then men were
hard and firm and strong. By comparison, people
in England appeared so pitifully weak, vain, paltry,
insignificant. What were the privations and the
hardships beside the sense of mastery, the happy adventure,
and the carelessness of life?
But the grey clouds hung over the
valley, pregnant with rain. It gave him a singular
feeling of discomfort to see them laden with water,
and yet painfully holding it up.
“I can’t stay in this
place,” he muttered. “I shall go mad.”
A sudden desire for flight seized
him. The clouds sank lower and lower, till he
imagined he must bend his head to avoid them.
If he could only get away for a little, he might regain
his calm. At least, absence, he thought bitterly,
was the only way to restore the old affection between
him and his father.
He went home, and announced that he was going to London.