Complete Works of D.H. Lawrence

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Complete Works of D.H. Lawrence Page 400

by D. H. Lawrence


  “Ay,” she said. “I suppose those are his bones again. And my bones are in Monica. Don’t stand up, lad, take your seat.”

  Jack sat down in extreme discomfort.

  “Well,” she resumed, “I was very well off with old Ellis, so I won’t complain. But you’ve got your English father’s eyes. You’d have been better with mine. Those bones, those beautiful bones, and my sort of eyes.”

  Gran’s eyes were queer and remote now. But they had been perhaps like Monica’s, only a darker grey, and with a darker, subtler cat look in them.

  “I suppose it will be in the children’s children,” she resumed, her eyes going out like a candle. “For I married old Ellis, though to this day I never quite believe it. And one thing I do know. I won’t die in the dying room of his house. I won’t do it, not if it was the custom of a hundred families. Not if he was here himself to see me do it. I wouldn’t. Though he was kindness itself. But not if he was here himself, and had the satisfaction of seeing me do it. A dreadful room! I’d be frightened to death to die in it. I like me sheets sun-kissed, heat or no heat, and no sun ever gets into that room. But it’s better for a woman to marry, even if she marries the wrong man. I allus said so. An old maid, especially a decayed gentlewoman, is a blight on the face of the earth.”

  “Why?” said Jack suddenly. The old woman was too authoritative.

  “That’s why! What do you know about it,” she said contemptuously.

  “I knew a nice old lady in England, who’d never been married,” he said, thinking of a really beautiful, gentle woman, who had kept all her perfume and her charm, in spite of her fifty-odd years of single blessedness. But then she had a naturally deep and religious nature, not like this pagan old cat of a Gran.

  “Did you!” said Gran, eying him severely. “What do you know at your age? I’ve got three unmarried daughters, and I’m ashamed of them. If I’d married your grandfather I never should have had them. Self-centred, and old as old boots, they are. I’d rather they’d gone wrong and died in the bush, like your Aunt who had a child by Mary’s father.”

  Jack made round, English eyes of amazement at this speech. He disapproved thoroughly.

  “You’ve got too much of your English father in you,” she said, “and not enough of your hard-hearted grandfather. Look at Lennie, what a beautiful boy he is.”

  There was a pause. Jack sat in a torment while she baited him. He was full of antagonism towards her and her years.

  “But I tell you, you never realise you’re old till you see your friends slipping away. One by one they go — over the border. That’s what makes you feel old. I tell you. Nothing else. Annie Brockman died the other day. I was at school with her. She wasn’t old, though you’d have thought so.”

  The way Gran said this was quite spiteful. And Jack thought to himself: “What nonsense, she was old if she was at school with Gran. If she was as old as Gran, she was awfully old.”

  “No, she wasn’t old — school girls and fellows laughing in the ball room, or breathing fast after a hard ride. You didn’t know Sydney in those days. And men grown old behind their beards for want of understanding; because they’re too dense to understand what living means. Men are dense. Are ye listening?”

  The question came with such queer aged force that Jack started almost out of his chair.

  “Yes, marm,” he said.

  “‘Yes marm!’ he says!” she repeated, with a queer little grin of amusement. “Listen to this grandfather’s chit saying ‘Yes marm!’ to me! Well, they’ll have their way. My friends are nearly all gone, so I suppose I shall soon be going. Not but what there’s plenty of amusement here.”

  She looked round in an odd way, as if she saw ghosts. Jack would have given his skin to escape her.

  “Listen,” she said with sudden secrecy. “I want ye to do something for me. You love Lennie, don’t ye?”

  Jack nodded.

  “So do I! I’m going to help him.” Her voice became sharp with secrecy. “I’ve put by a stocking for him,” she hissed. “At least it’s not a stocking, it’s a tin box, but it’s the same thing. It’s up there!” She pointed with her stick at the wide black chimney. “Dye understand?”

  She eyed Jack with aged keenness, and he nodded, though his understanding was rather vague. Truth to tell, nothing she said seemed to him quite real. As if, poor Gran, her age put her outside of reason.

  “That stocking is for Lennie. Tom’s mother was nobody knows who, though I’m not going to say Jacob never married her, if Jack says he did. But Tom’ll get everything. The same as Jacob did. That’s how it hits back at me. I wanted Jacob to have the place, and now it goes to Tom, and my little Lennie gets nothing. Alice has been a good woman, and a good wife to Jacob: better than he deserved. I’m going to stand by her. That stocking in there is for Lennie because he’s her eldest son. In a tin box. Y’understand?”

  And she pointed again at the chimney.

  Jack nodded, though he didn’t really take it in. He had a little horror of Gran at all times; but when she took on this witch-like portentousness, and whispered at him in a sharp, aged whisper, about money, hidden money, it all seemed so abnormal to him that he refused to take it for real. The queer, aged, female spirit that had schemed with money for the men-folk she chose, scheming to oust those she had not elected, was so strange and half-ghoulish, that he merely shrank from taking it in. When she pointed with her white-headed stick at the wide black mouth of the chimney, he glanced and looked quickly away again. He did not want to think of a hoard of sovereigns in a stocking — or a tin box — secreted in there. He did not want to think of the subtle, scheming, vindictive old woman reaching up into the soot, to add more gold to the hoard. It was all unnatural to him and to his generation.

  But Gran despised him and his generation. It was as unreal to her as hers to him.

  “Old George couldn’t even persuade that Jacob of mine to sign a marriage settlement,” she continued. “And I wasn’t going to force him. Would you believe a man could be such an obstinate fool?”

  “Yes, marm,” said Jack automatically.

  And Gran stamped her stick at him in sudden vicious rage.

  The stamping of the stick brought Grace, and he fled.

  III

  That evening they were all sitting in the garden. The drawing room was thrown open, as usual on Sunday, but nobody even went in except to strum the piano. Monica was strumming hymns now. Grace came along calling Mary. Mary was staying on at Wandoo.

  “Mary, Gran wants you. She feels faint. Come and see to her, will you?”

  Ellie came and slipped her fat little hand into Jack’s, hanging on to him. Katie and Lennie sat surreptitiously playing cats’-cradle, on the steps: forbidden act, on the Sabbath. The twin boys wriggled their backs against the gate-posts and their toes into the earth, asking each other riddles. Harry as usual aimed stones at birds. It was a close evening, the wind had not come. And they all were uneasy, with that uncanny uneasiness that attacks families, because Gran was not well.

  Harry was singing profanely, profaning the Sabbath.

  “A blue jay sat on a hickory limb,

  He wink at me, I wink at him.

  I up with a stone, an’ hit him on the shin.

  Says he, Little Nigger, don’ do that agin!

  Clar de kitchen, ol’ folk, young folk!

  Clar de kitchen, ol’ folk, young folk!

  An’ let us dance till dawn O.”

  Harry shouted out these wicked words half loud to a tune of his own that was no tune.

  Jack did not speak. The sense of evening, Sunday evening, far away from any church or bell, was strong upon him. The sun was slow in the sky, and the light intensely strong, all fine gold. He went out to look. The sunlight flooded the dry, dry earth till it glowed again, and the gum-trees that stood up hung tresses of liquid shadow from trunks of gold, and the buildings seemed to melt blue in the vision of light. Someone was riding in from westward, and a cloud of pure gold-dust rose f
uming from the earth about the horse and the horseman, with a vast, overwhelming gold glow of the void heavens above. The whole west was so powerful with pure gold light, coming from immense space and the sea, that it seemed like a transfiguration, and another horseman rode fuming in a dust of light as if he were coming, small and Daniel-like, out of the vast furnace-mouth of creation. Jack looked west, into the welter of yellow light, in fear. He knew again, as he had known before, that his day was not the day of all the world, there was a huger sunset than the sunset of his race. There were vaster, more unspeakable gods than the gods of his fathers. The god in this yellow fire was huger than the white men could understand, and seemed to proclaim their doom.

  Out of this immense power of the glory seemed to come a proclamation of doom. Lesser glories must crumble to powder in this greater glow, as the horsemen rode trotting in the glorified cloud of the earth, spuming a glory all round them. They seemed like messengers out of the great West, coming with a proclamation of doom, the small, trotting, aureoled figures kicking up dust like sun-dust, and gradually growing larger, hardening out of the sea of light. Like sun-arrivals.

  Though after all it was only Alec Rice and Tom. But they were gilded men, dusty and sun-luminous, as they came into the yard, with their brown faces strangely vague in shadow, unreal.

  The sun was setting, huge and liquid, and sliding down at immense speed behind the far-off molten, wavering, long ridge towards the coast. Fearsome the great liquid sun was, stooping fiercely down like an enemy stooping to hide his glory, leaving the sky hovering and pulsing above, with a sense of wings, and a sense of proclamation, and of doom. It seemed to say to Jack: I and my race are doomed. But even the doom is a splendour.

  Shadow lay very thin on the earth, pale as day, though the sun was gone. Jack turned back to the house. The tiny twins were staggering home to find their supper, their hands in the pockets of their Sunday breeches. The pockets of everyday breeches were, for some mysterious reason, always sewn up, so Sunday alone knew this swagger. Harry was being called in to bed. And Len and Katie, rarely far off at meal times, were converging towards supper too.

  Monica was still drumming listlessly on the piano, and singing in a little voice. She had a very sweet voice, but she usually sang “small.” She was not singing a hymn, Jack became aware of this. She was singing, rather nervously, or irritably, and with her own queer yearning pathos:

  “Oh Jane, Oh Jane, my pretty Jane, Oh Jane,

  Ah never, never look so shy.

  But meet me, meet me in the moonlight,

  When the dew is on the rye.”

  Someone had lighted the piano candles, and she sat there strumming and singing in a little voice, and looking queer and lonely. His heart went hot in his breast, and then started pounding. He crossed silently, and stood just behind her. For some moments she would not notice him, but went on singing the same. And he stood perfectly still close behind her. Then at last she glanced upward at him, and his heart stood still again with the same sense of doom the sun had given him. She still went on singing for a few moments. Then she stopped abruptly, and jerked her hand from the piano.

  “Don’t you want to sing?” she asked sharply.

  “Not particularly.”

  “What do you want then?”

  “Let us go out.”

  She looked at him strangely, then rose in her abrupt fashion. She followed him across the yard in silence, while he felt the curious sense of doom settling down on him.

  He sat down on the step of the back-door of the barn, outside, looking southward into the vast, rapidly darkening country, and glanced up at her. She, rather petulantly, sat down beside him. He felt for her cool slip of a hand, and she let it lie in his hot one. But she averted her face.

  “Why don’t you like me?” she asked petulantly.

  “But I love you,” he said thickly, with shame and the sense of doom piercing his heart.

  She turned swiftly and stared him in the face with a brilliant, oddly triumphant look.

  “Sure?” she said.

  His heart seemed to go black with doom. But he turned away his face from her glowing eyes, and put his arm round her waist, and drew her to him. His whole body was trembling like a taut string, and she could feel the painful plunging of his heart as he pressed her fast against him, pressed the breath out of her.

  “Monica!” he murmured blindly, in pain, like a man who is in the dark.

  “What?” she said softly.

  He hid his face against her shoulder, in the shame and anguish of desire. He would have given anything, if this need never have come upon him. But the strange fine quivering of his body thrilled her. She put her cheek down caressingly against his hair. She could be very tender, very, very tender and caressing. And he grew quieter.

  He looked up at the night again, hot with pain and doom and necessity. It had grown quite dark, the stars were out.

  “I suppose we shall have to be married,” he said in a dismal voice.

  “Why?” she laughed. It seemed a very sudden and long stride to her. He had not even kissed her.

  But he did not answer, did not even hear her question. She watched his fine young face in the dark, looking sullen and doomed at the stars.

  “Kiss me!” she whispered, in the most secret whisper he had ever heard. “Kiss me!”

  He turned, in the same battle of unwillingness. But as if magnetised he put forward his face and kissed her on the mouth: the first kiss of his life. And she seemed to hold him. And the fierce, fiery pain of pleasure which came with that kiss sent his soul rebelling in torment to hell. He had never wanted to be given up, to be broken by the black hands of this doom. But broken he was, and his soul seemed to be leaving him, in the pain and obsession of this desire, against which he struggled so fiercely.

  She seemed to be pleased, to be laughing. And she was exquisitely sweet to him. How could he be otherwise than caught, and broken.

  After an hour of this love-making she blackened him again, by saying they must go in to supper. But she meant it, so in he had to go.

  Only when he was alone again in the cubby did he resume the fight to recover himself from her again. To be free as he had been before. Not to be under the torment of the spell of this desire. To preserve himself intact. To preserve himself from her.

  He lay awake in his bed in the cubby and thanked God he was away from her. Thanked God he was alone, with a sufficient space of loneliness around him. Thanked God he was immune from her, that he could sleep in the sanctity of his own isolation. He didn’t want even to think about her.

  IV

  Gran did not leave her room that week, and Tom talked of fetching the relations.

  “What for?” asked Jack.

  “They’d like to be present,” said Tom.

  Jack felt incredulous.

  Lennie came out of her room, sniffing and wiping his eyes with his knuckles.

  “Poor ol’ girl!” he sniffed. “She do look frail. She’s almost like a little girl again.”

  “You don’t think she’s dying, do you, Len?” asked Jack.

  “I don’t think, I knows,” replied Len, with utmost scorn. “Sooner, or later she’s bound to go hence and be no more seen. But she’ll be missed, for many a day, she will.”

  “But Tom,” said Jack. “Do you think Gran will like to have all the relations sniffling round her when she gets worse?”

  “I should think so,” replied Tom. “Anyway, I should like to die respectable, whether you would or not.”

  Jack gave it up. Some things were beyond him, and dying respectable was one of them.

  “Like they do in books,” said Len, seeing that Jack disapproved, and trying to justify Tom’s position. “Even ol’ Nelson died proper. ‘Kiss me, ‘Ardy,’ he said, an’ ‘Ardy kissed him, grubby and filthy as he was. He could do no less, though it was beastly.”

  Still the boys were not sent for the relations until the following Sunday, which was a rest day. Jack went to the Gum Valley
Homestead, because he knew the way. He set off before dawn. The terrific heat of the New Year had already passed, and the dawn came fresh and lovely. He was happy on that ride, Gran or no Gran. And that’s what he thought would be the happiest: always to ride on at dawn, in a nearly virgin country. Always to be riding away.

  The Greenlows seemed to expect him. They had been “warned.” After he had been refreshed with a good breakfast, they were ready to start, in the buggy. Jack rode in the buggy with them, his saddle under his seat and the neck-rope of the horse in his hand. The hack ran behind, and nearly jerked Jack’s arms out of their sockets, with its halts and its disinclination to trot. Almost it hauled him out of the buggy sometimes. He would much rather have ridden the animal, but he had been requested to take the buggy, to spare it.

  Mr. and Mrs. Greenlow scarcely spoke on the journey; it would not have been “showing sorrow.” But Jack felt they were enjoying themselves immensely, driving in this morning air instead of being cooped up in the house, she cooking and he with the Holy Book. The sun grew furiously hot. But Gum Valley Croft was seven miles nearer to Wandoo than the Ellis’ Gum Tree Selection, so they drove into the yard, wet with perspiration, just before the mid-day meal was put on to the table. Mrs. Ellis, aproned and bare-armed, greeted them as they drove up, calling out that they should go right in, and Jack should take the horses out of the buggy.

  Quite a number of strange hacks were tethered here and there in the yard, near odd, empty vehicles, sulkies dejectedly leaning forward on empty shafts, or buggies and wagonettes sturdily important on four wheels. Yet the place seemed strangely quiet.

  Jack came back to the narrow verandah outside the parlour door, where Mrs. Ellis had her fuchsias, ferns, cyclamens and musk growing in pots. A table had been set there, and dinner was in progress, the girls coming round from the kitchen with the dishes. Grace saw Jack hesitate, so she nodded to him. He went to the kitchen and asked doubtfully:

  “How is she?”

  “Oh, bad! Poor old dear. They’re all in there to say goodbye.”

 

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