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But John Bidlake would not hear of it. 'He's simply naughty, that's all. He just
won't eat.' And turning to the boy, 'Swallow, child, swallow!' he shouted. 'Have you
forgotten how to swallow?' The spectacle of little Phil chewing and chewing interminably
on a mouthful of something he did not like exasperated him. 'Swallow, boy! Don't go on
ruminating like that. You're not a cow. Swallow!' And, very red in the face, with tears
welling up into his eyes, little Phil would make a terrible effort to swallow the abhorred
cud of five minutes' queasy mastication. The muscles of his throat would heave and
ripple, an expression of invincible disgust would distort his small face, there would be an
ominous sound of retching. 'But it's simply revolting!' stormed the old man. 'Swallow!'
His shouting was an almost infallible recipe for making the child sick.
* * * *
Burdens fell, darkness gave place to light, Marjorie apocalyptically understood all
the symbols of religious literature. For she herself had struggled in the Slough of
Despond and had emerged; she too had climbed laboriously and without hope and had
suddenly been consoled by a sight of the promised land.
'All these phrases used to sound so conventional and meaninglessly pious,' she
said to Mrs. Quarles. 'But now I see they're just descriptions of facts.'
Mrs. Quarles nodded. 'Bad descriptions, because the facts are indescribable. But if
you've had personal experience of them, you can see what the symbols are driving at.'
'Do you know the Black Country?' said Marjorie. 'I feel as though I'd come out of
one of those mining towns on to the moors. Out into the great open spaces,' she added in
her earnest, rather drawlingly childish voice. (The voice, Mrs. Quarles couldn't help
thinking, and repented immediately of the thought--for after all the poor girl couldn't help
her voice--made the great open spaces seem curiously stuffy.) 'And when I look back, the
black town seems so small and insignificant compared with the space and the enormous
sky. As though one were looking at it through the wrong end of a pair of field-glasses.'
Mrs. Quarles frowned slightly. 'Not so insignificant as all that,' she said. 'For after
all, there are people living in the town, however black it may be. And the wrong end of
the field-glasses is the wrong end. One isn't meant to look at things so that they appear
small and insignificant. That's one of the dangers of getting out under the sky; one's too
apt to think of the towns and the people in them as small and remote and unimportant.
But they aren't, Marjorie. And it's the business of the lucky ones who have got out into
the open to help the others to come too.' She frowned again, at herself this time; she hated
anything like preaching. But Marjorie mustn't imagine herself superior, promoted out of
the world. 'How's Walter?' she asked with an irrelevance that was no irrelevance. 'How
are you getting on together now?'
'The same as ever,' said Marjorie. The admission, a few weeks ago, would have
made her utterly wretched. But now even Walter had begun to seem small and rather
remote. She loved him still, of course; but somehow through the wrong end of the field-
glasses. Through the right end she saw only God and Jesus; they loomed overwhelmingly
large.
Mrs. Quarles looked at her, and an expression of sadness passed quickly over her
sensitive face. 'Poor Walter!' she said.
'Yes, I'm sorry for him too,' said Marjorie. There was silence.
Old Dr. Fisher had told her to come and report progress every few weeks, and
Marjorie took advantage of that Wednesday's cheap excursion tickets to run up to town,
do some necessary shopping and tell the doctor how well she felt.
'You look it too,' said Dr. Fisher, peering at her first through his spectacles, then
over the top of them. 'Extraordinarily much better than when you were here last. It often
happens in the fourth month,' he went on to explain. Dr. Fisher liked to make his patients
take an intelligent interest in their own physiology. 'Health improves. So do spirits. It's
the body settling down to the new state of affairs. The changes in the circulation no doubt
have something to do with it. The foetal heart begins to beat about this time. I've known
cases of neurasthenic women who wanted to have one baby after another, as quick as
ever it could be managed. Pregnancy was the only thing that could cure them of their
melancholy and obsessions. How little as yet we understand about the relations between
body and mind!'
Marjorie smiled and said nothing. Dr. Fisher was an angel, one of the best and
kindest men in the whole world. But there were things he understood even less of than
the relations between body and mind. What did he understand about God, for example?
What did he understand about the soul and its mystical communion with spiritual
powers? Poor Dr. Fisher! All that he could talk about was the fourth month of pregnancy
and the foetal heart. She smiled inwardly, feeling a kind of pity for the old man.
Burlap that morning was affectionate. 'Old man,' he said, laying a hand on
Walter's shoulder,'shouldn't we go out and eat a chop together somewhere?' He gave
Walter's shoulder a little squeeze and smiled down at him with the wistful enigmatic
tenderness of one of Sodoma's saints.
'Alas,' said Walter, trying to simulate an answering affection,' I'm lunching with a
man at the other end of London.' It was a lie; but he couldn't face the prospect of an hour
with Burlap in a Fleet Street chophouse. Besides, he wanted to see if there was a letter
from Lucy waiting for him at the club. He looked at his watch. 'Lord!' he added, not
wishing to prolong the conversation with Burlap, 'I must be off.'
Outside it was raining. The umbrellas were like black mushrooms that had
suddenly sprouted from the mud. Gloomy, gloomy. In Madrid the sunshine would be
ferocious. 'But I love the heat,' she had said. 'I blossom in ovens.' He had imagined
Spanish nights, dark and hot, and her body pale in the starlight, a ghost, but tangible and
warm; and love as patient and relentless as hatred, and possessions like slow murder. His
imaginations had justified every conceivable lie and outrage. It mattered not what might
be done or left undone, provided the imaginations were realized. He had prepared the
ground, he had invented a series of elaborate lies, one set for Burlap, another for
Marjorie; he had made enquiries about the price of tickets, he had arranged for an
overdraft at the bank. And then came Lucy's letter with the news that she had changed her
mind. She was going to stay in Paris. Why? There was only one possible reason. His
jealousy, his disappointment; his humiliation had overflowed into six pages of reproach
and fury.
'Any letters?' he asked offhandedly of the porter as he entered the club. His tone
was meant to imply that he expected nothing more interesting than a publisher's circular
or a philanthropic offer to lend five thousand pounds without security. The porter handed
him the familiar yellow envelope. He tore it open and unfolded three sheets of pencilled
scribble. 'Quai Voltaire. Monday.' He pored over the writing. It was almost as difficult to
read as an ancient manuscript. 'Why do you always write to me in pencil?' He
remembered Cuthbert Arkwright's question and her answer. 'I'll kiss the ink away,' he had
replied. The lout! Walter entered the dining-room and ordered his lunch. Between the
mouthfuls he deciphered Lucy's letter. 'Quai Voltaire. Insufferable, your letter. Once and [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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