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<h1>IN THE CAGE</h1>
<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
<p>It had occurred to her early that in her position—that of a
young person spending, in framed and wired confinement, the life of
a guinea-pig or a magpie—she should know a great many persons
without their recognising the acquaintance. That made it an emotion
the more lively—though singularly rare and always, even then,
with opportunity still very much smothered—to see any one come
in whom she knew outside, as she called it, any one who could add anything
to the meanness of her function. Her function was to sit there
with two young men—the other telegraphist and the counter-clerk;
to mind the “sounder,” which was always going, to dole out
stamps and postal-orders, weigh letters, answer stupid questions, give
difficult change and, more than anything else, count words as numberless
as the sands of the sea, the words of the telegrams thrust, from morning
to night, through the gap left in the high lattice, across the encumbered
shelf that her forearm ached with rubbing. This transparent screen
fenced out or fenced in, according to the side of the narrow counter
on which the human lot was cast, the duskiest corner of a shop pervaded
not a little, in winter, by the poison of perpetual gas, and at all
times by the presence of hams, cheese, dried fish, soap, varnish, paraffin
and other solids and fluids that she came to know perfectly by their
smells without consenting to know them by their names.</p>
<p>The barrier that divided the little post-and-telegraph-office from
the grocery was a frail structure of wood and wire; but the social,
the professional separation was a gulf that fortune, by a stroke quite
remarkable, had spared her the necessity of contributing at all publicly
to bridge. When Mr. Cocker’s young men stepped over from
behind the other counter to change a five-pound note—and Mr. Cocker’s
situation, with the cream of the “Court Guide” and the dearest
furnished apartments, Simpkin’s, Ladle’s, Thrupp’s,
just round the corner, was so select that his place was quite pervaded
by the crisp rustle of these emblems—she pushed out the sovereigns
as if the applicant were no more to her than one of the momentary, the
practically featureless, appearances in the great procession; and this
perhaps all the more from the very fact of the connexion (only recognised
outside indeed) to which she had lent herself with ridiculous inconsequence.
She recognised the others the less because she had at last so unreservedly,
so irredeemably, recognised Mr. Mudge. However that might be,
she was a little ashamed of having to admit to herself that Mr. Mudge’s
removal to a higher sphere—to a more commanding position, that
is, though to a much lower neighbourhood—would have been described
still better as a luxury than as the mere simplification, the corrected
awkwardness, that she contented herself with calling it. He had
at any rate ceased to be all day long in her eyes, and this left something
a little fresh for them to rest on of a Sunday. During the three
months of his happy survival at Cocker’s after her consent to
their engagement she had often asked herself what it was marriage would
be able to add to a familiarity that seemed already to have scraped
the platter so clean. Opposite there, behind the counter of which
his superior stature, his whiter apron, his more clustering curls and
more present, too present, <i>h</i>’s had been for a couple of
years the principal ornament, he had moved to and fro before her as
on the small sanded floor of their contracted future. She was
conscious now of the improvement of not having to take her present and
her future at once. They were about as much as she could manage
when taken separate.</p>
<p>She had, none the less, to give her mind steadily to what Mr. Mudge
had again written her about, the idea of her applying for a transfer
to an office quite similar—she couldn’t yet hope for a place
in a bigger—under the very roof where he was foreman, so that,
dangled before her every minute of the day, he should see her, as he
called it, “hourly,” and in a part, the far N.W. district,
where, with her mother, she would save on their two rooms alone nearly
three shillings. It would be far from dazzling to exchange Mayfair
for Chalk Farm, and it wore upon her much that he could never drop a
subject; still, it didn’t wear as things <i>had</i> worn, the
worries of the early times of their great misery, her own, her mother’s
and her elder sister’s—the last of whom had succumbed to
all but absolute want when, as conscious and incredulous ladies, suddenly
bereft, betrayed, overwhelmed, they had slipped faster and faster down
the steep slope at the bottom of which she alone had rebounded.
Her mother had never rebounded any more at the bottom than on the way;
had only rumbled and grumbled down and down, making, in respect of caps,
topics and “habits,” no effort whatever—which simply
meant smelling much of the time of whiskey.</p>
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