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<h1> JEREMY </h1>
<h2> By Hugh Walpole </h2>
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<h2> CHAPTER I. THE BIRTHDAY </h2>
<p>I</p>
<p>About thirty years ago there was at the top of the right-hand side of
Orange Street, in Polchester, a large stone house. I say “was”; the shell
of it is still there, and the people who now live in it are quite unaware,
I suppose, that anything has happened to the inside of it, except that
they are certainly assured that their furniture is vastly superior to the
furniture of their predecessors. They have a gramophone, a pianola, and a
lift to bring the plates from the kitchen into the dining-room, and a
small motor garage at the back where the old pump used to be, and a very
modern rock garden where once was the pond with the fountain that never
worked. Let them cherish their satisfaction. No one grudges it to them.
The Coles were, by modern standards, old-fashioned people, and the Stone
House was an old-fashioned house.</p>
<p>Young Jeremy Cole was born there in the year 1884, very early in the
morning of December 8th. He was still there very early in the morning of
December 8th, 1892. He was sitting up in bed. The cuckoo clock had just
struck five, and he was aware that he was, at this very moment, for the
first time in his life, eight years old. He had gone to bed at eight
o'clock on the preceding evening with the choking consciousness that he
would awake in the morning a different creature. Although he had slept,
there had permeated the texture of his dreams that same choking
excitement, and now, wide awake, as though he had asked the cuckoo to call
him in order that he might not be late for the great occasion, he stared
into the black distance of his bedroom and reflected, with a beating
heart, upon the great event. He was eight years old, and he had as much
right now to the nursery arm-chair with a hole in it as Helen had.</p>
<p>That was his first definite realisation of approaching triumph. Throughout
the whole of his seventh year he had fought with Helen, who was most
unjustly a year older than he and persistently proud of that injustice, as
to his right to use the wicker arm-chair whensoever it pleased him. So
destructive of the general peace of the house had these incessant battles
been, so unavailing the suggestions of elderly relations that gentlemen
always yielded to ladies, that a compromise had been arrived at. When
Jeremy was eight he should have equal rights with Helen. Well and good.
Jeremy had yielded to that. It was the only decent chair in the nursery.
Into the place where the wicker, yielding to rude and impulsive pressure,
had fallen away, one's body might be most happily fitted. It was of
exactly the right height; it made the handsomest creaking noises when one
rocked in it—and, in any case, Helen was only a girl.</p>
<p>But the sense of his triumph had not yet fully descended upon him. As he
sat up in bed, yawning, with a tickle in the middle of his back and his
throat very dry; he was disappointingly aware that he was still the same
Jeremy of yesterday. He did not know what it was exactly that he had
expected, but he did not feel at present that confident proud glory for
which he had been prepared. Perhaps it was too early.</p>
<p>He turned round, curled his head into his arm, and with a half-muttered,
half-dreamt statement about the wicker chair, he was once again asleep.</p>
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<h2> II </h2>
<p>He awoke to the customary sound of the bath water running into the bath.
His room was flooded with sunshine, and old Jampot, the nurse (her name
was Mrs. Preston and her shape was Jampot), was saying as usual: “Now,
Master Jeremy, eight o'clock; no lying in bed—out—you get—bath—ready.”</p>
<p>He stared at her, blinking.</p>
<p>“You should say 'Many Happy Returns of the Day, Master Jeremy,'” he
remarked. Then suddenly, with a leap, he was out of bed, had crossed the
floor, pushed back the nursery door, and was sitting in the wicker
arm-chair, his naked feet kicking a triumphant dance.</p>
<p>“Helen! Helen!” he called. “I'm in the chair.”</p>
<p>No sound.</p>
<p>“I'm eight,” he shouted, “and I'm in the chair.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Preston, breathless and exclaiming, hurried across to him.</p>
<p>“Oh, you naughty boy... death of cold... in your nightshirt.”</p>
<p>“I'm eight,” he said, looking at her scornfully, “and I can sit here as
long as I please.”</p>
<p>Helen, her pigtails flapping on either shoulder, her nose red, as it
always was early in the morning, appeared at the opposite end of the
nursery.</p>
<p>“Nurse, he mustn't, must he? Tell him not to. I don't care how old you
are. It's my chair. Mother said—”</p>
<p>“No, she didn't. Mother said—”</p>
<p>“Yes, she did. Mother said—”</p>
<p>“Mother said that when—”</p>
<p>“Oh, you story. You know that Mother said—” Then suddenly a new,
stiffening, trusting dignity filled him, as though he had with a turn of
the head discovered himself in golden armour.</p>
<p>He was above this vulgar wrangling now. That was for girls. He was
superior to them all. He got down from the chair and stood, his head up,
on the old Turkey rug (red with yellow cockatoos) in front of the roaring
fire.</p>
<p>“You may have your old chair,” he said to Helen. “I'm eight now, and I
don't want it any more... although if I do want it I shall have it,” he
added.</p>
<p>He was a small, square boy with a pug-nosed face. His hair was light
brown, thin and stiff, so that it was difficult to brush, and although you
watered it, stood up in unexpected places and stared at you. His eyes were
good, dark brown and large, but he was in no way handsome; his neck, his
nose ridiculous. His mouth was too large, and his chin stuck out like a
hammer.</p>
<p>He was, plainly, obstinate and possibly sulky, although when he smiled his
whole face was lighted with humour. Helen was the only beautiful Cole
child, and she was abundantly aware of that fact. The Coles had never been
a good-looking family.</p>
<p>He stood in front of the fireplace now as he had seen his father do, his
short legs apart, his head up, and his hands behind his back.</p>
<p>“Now, Master Jeremy,” the Jampot continued, “you may be eight years old,
but it isn't a reason for disobedience the very first minute, and, of
course, your bath is ready and you catching your death with naked feet,
which you've always been told to put your slippers on and not to keep the
bath waiting, when there's Miss Helen and Miss Mary, as you very well
know, and breakfast coming in five minutes, which there's sausages this
morning, because it's your birthday, and them all getting cold—”</p>
<p>“Sausages!”</p>
<p>He was across the floor in a moment, had thrown off his nightshirt and was
in his bath. Sausages! He was translated into a world of excitement and
splendour. They had sausages so seldom, not always even on birthdays, and
to-day, on a cold morning, with a crackling fire and marmalade, perhaps—and
then all the presents.</p>
<p>Oh, he was happy. As he rubbed his back with the towel a wonderful glowing
Christian charity spread from his head to his toes and tingled through
every inch of him. Helen should sit in the chair when she pleased; Mary
should be allowed to dress and undress the large woollen dog, known as
“Sulks,” his own especial and beloved property, so often as she wished;
Jampot should poke the twisted end of the towel in his ears and brush his
hair with the hard brushes, and he would not say a word. Aunt Mary should
kiss him (as, of course, she would want to do), and he would not shiver;
he would (bravest deed of all) allow Mary to read “Alice in Wonderland” in
her sing-sing voice so long as ever she wanted... Sausages! Sausages!</p>
<p>In his shirt and his short blue trousers, his hair on end, tugging at his
braces, he stood in the doorway and shouted:</p>
<p>“Helen, there are sausages—because it's my birthday. Aren't you
glad?”</p>
<p>And even when the only response to his joyous invitation was Helen's voice
crossly admonishing the Jampot: “Oh, you do pull so; you're hurting!”—his
charity was not checked.</p>
<p>Then when he stood clothed and of a cheerful mind once more in front of
the fire a shyness stole over him. He knew that the moment for Presents
was approaching; he knew that very shortly he would have to kiss and be
kissed by a multitude of persons, that he would have to say again and
again, “Oh, thank you, thank you so much!” that he would have his usual
consciousness of his inability to thank anybody at all in the way that
they expected to be thanked. Helen and Mary never worried about such
things. They delighted in kissing and hugging and multitudes of words. If
only he might have had his presents by himself and then stolen out and
said “Thank you” to the lot of them and have done with it.</p>
<p>He watched the breakfast-table with increasing satisfaction—the
large teapot with the red roses, the dark blue porridge plates, the glass
jar with the marmalade a rich yellow inside it, the huge loaf with the
soft pieces bursting out between the crusty pieces, the solid square of
butter, so beautiful a colour and marked with a large cow and a tree on
the top (he had seen once in the kitchen the wooden shape with which the
cook made this handsome thing). There were also his own silver mug, given
him at his christening by Canon Trenchard, his godfather, and his silver
spoon, given him on the same occasion by Uncle Samuel.</p>
<p>All these things glittered and glowed in the firelight, and a kettle was
singing on the hob and Martha the canary was singing in her cage in the
window. (No one really knew whether the canary were a lady or a gentleman,
but the name had been Martha after a beloved housemaid, now married to the
gardener, and the sex had followed the name.)</p>
<p>There were also all the other familiar nursery things. The hole in the
Turkey carpet near the bookcase, the rocking-horse, very shiny where you
sit and very Christmas-tree-like as to its tail; the doll's house, now
deserted, because Helen was too old and Mary too clever; the pictures of
“Church on Christmas Morning” (everyone with their mouths very wide open,
singing a Christmas hymn, with holly), “Dignity and Impudence,” after
Landseer, “The Shepherds and the Angels,” and “The Charge of the Light
Brigade.” So packed was the nursery with history for Jeremy that it would
have taken quite a week to relate it all. There was the spot where he had
bitten the Jampot's fingers, for which deed he had afterwards been
slippered by his father; there the corner where they stood for punishment
(he knew exactly how many ships with sails, how many ridges of waves, and
how many setting suns there were on that especial piece of corner
wallpaper—three ships, twelve ridges, two and a half suns); there
was the place where he had broken the ink bottle over his shoes and the
carpet, there by the window, where Mary had read to him once when he had
toothache, and he had not known whether her reading or the toothache
agonised him the more; and so on, an endless sequence of sensational
history.</p>
<p>His reminiscences were cut short by the appearance of Gladys with the
porridge. Gladys, who was only the between-maid, but was nevertheless
stout, breathless from her climb and the sentiment of the occasion,
produced from a deep pocket a dirty envelope, which she laid upon the
table.</p>
<p>“Many 'appy returns, Master Jeremy.” Giggle... giggle... “Lord save us if
I 'aven't gone and forgotten they spunes,” and she vanished. The
present-giving had begun.</p>
<p>He had an instant's struggle as to whether it were better to wait until
all the presents had accumulated, or whether he would take them separately
as they arrived. The dirty envelope lured him. He advanced towards it and
seized it. He could not read very easily the sprawling writing on the
cover, but he guessed that it said “From Gladys to Master Jeremy.” Within
was a marvellous card, tied together with glistening cord and shining with
all the colours of the rainbow. It was apparently a survival from last
Christmas, as there was a church in snow and a peal of bells; he was,
nevertheless, very happy to have it.</p>
<p>After his introduction events moved swiftly. First Helen and Mary
appeared, their faces shining and solemn and mysterious—Helen
self-conscious and Mary staring through her spectacles like a profound
owl.</p>
<p>Because Jeremy had known Mary ever since he could remember, he was unaware
that there was anything very peculiar about her. But in truth she was a
strange looking child. Very thin, she had a large head, with big
outstanding ears, spectacles, and yellow hair pulled back and “stringy.”
Her large hands were always red, and her forehead was freckled. She was as
plain a child as you were ever likely to see, but there was character in
her mouth and eyes, and although she was only seven years old, she could
read quite difficult books (she was engaged at this particular time upon
“Ivanhoe”), and she was a genius at sums.</p>
<p>The passion of her life, as the family were all aware, was Jeremy, but it
was an unfortunate and uncomfortable passion. She bothered and worried
him, she was insanely jealous; she would sulk for days did he ever seem to
prefer Helen to herself. No one understood her; she was considered a
“difficult child,” quite unlike any other member of the family, except
possibly Samuel, Mr. Cole's brother-in-law, who was an unsuccessful
painter and therefore “odd.”</p>
<p>As Mary was at present only seven years of age it would be too much to say
that the family was afraid of her. Aunt Amy's attitude was: “Well, after
all, she's sure to be clever when she grows up, poor child;” and although
the parishioners of Mary's father always alluded to her as “the ludicrous
Cole child,” they told awed little stories about the infant's mental
capacities, and concluded comfortably, “I'm glad Alice (or Jane or Matilda
or Anabel) isn't clever like that. They overwork when they are young, and
then when they grow up—”</p>
<p>Meanwhile Mary led her private life. She attached herself to no one but
Jeremy; she was delicate and suffered from perpetual colds; she therefore
spent much of her time in the nursery reading, her huge spectacles close
to the page, her thin legs like black sticks stuck up on the fender in
front of the fire or curled up under her on the window-seat.</p>
<p>Very different was Helen. Helen had a mass of dark black hair, big black
eyes with thick eye-lashes, a thin white neck, little feet, and already an
eye to “effects” in dress. She was charming to strangers, to the queer
curates who haunted the family hall, to poor people and rich people, to
old people and young people. She was warm-hearted but not impulsive,
intelligent but not clever, sympathetic but not sentimental, impatient but
never uncontrolled. She liked almost everyone and almost everything, but
no one and nothing mattered to her very deeply; she liked going to church,
always learnt her Collect first on Sunday, and gave half her pocket-money
to the morning collection. She was generous but never extravagant, enjoyed
food but was not greedy. She was quite aware that she was pretty and might
one day be beautiful, and she was glad of that, but she was never silly
about her looks.</p>
<p>When Aunt Amy, who was always silly about everything, said in her presence
to visitors, “Isn't Helen the loveliest thing you ever saw?” she managed
by her shy self-confidence to suggest that she was pretty, that Aunt Amy
was a fool, and life was altogether very agreeable, but that none of these
things was of any great importance. She was very good friends with Jeremy,
but she played no part in his life at all. At the same time she often
fought with him, simply from her real deep consciousness of her
superiority to him. She valued her authority and asserted it incessantly.
That authority had until last year been unchallenged, but Jeremy now was
growing. She had, although she did not as yet realise it, a difficult time
before her.</p>
<p>Helen and Mary advanced with their presents, laid them on the
breakfast-table, and then retreated to watch the effect of it all.</p>
<p>“Shall I now?” asked Jeremy.</p>
<p>“Yes, now,” said Helen and Mary.</p>
<p>There were three parcels, one large and “shoppy,” two small and bound with
family paper, tied by family hands with family string. He grasped
immediately the situation. The shoppy parcel was bought with mother's
money and only “pretended” to be from his sisters; the two small parcels
were the very handiwork of the ladies themselves, the same having been
seen by all eyes at work for the last six months, sometimes, indeed, under
the cloak of attempted secrecy, but more often—because weariness or
ill-temper made them careless—in the full light of day.</p>
<p>His interest was centred almost entirely in the “shoppy” parcel, which by
its shape might be “soldiers”; but he knew the rules of the game, and
disregarding the large, ostentatious brown-papered thing, he went
magnificently for the two small incoherent bundles.</p>
<p>He opened them. A flat green table-centre with a red pattern of roses, a
thick table-napkin ring worked in yellow worsted, these were revealed.</p>
<p>“Oh!” he cried, “just what I wanted.” (Father always said that on his
birthday.)</p>
<p>“Is it?” said Mary and Helen.</p>
<p>“Mine's the ring,” said Mary. “It's dirty rather, but it would have got
dirty, anyway, afterwards.” She watched anxiously to see whether he
preferred Helen's.</p>
<p>He watched them nervously, lest he should be expected to kiss them. He
wiped his mouth with his hand instead, and began rapidly to talk:</p>
<p>“Jampot will know now which mine is. She's always giving me the wrong one.
I'll have it always, and the green thing too.”</p>
<p>“It's for the middle of a table,” Helen interrupted.</p>
<p>“Yes, I know,” said Jeremy hurriedly. “I'll always have it too—like
Mary's—when I'm grown up and all.... I say, shall I open the other
one now?”</p>
<p>“Yes, you can,” said Helen and Mary, ceasing to take the central place in
the ceremony, spectators now and eagerly excited.</p>
<p>But Mary had a last word.</p>
<p>“You do like mine, don't you?”</p>
<p>“Of course, like anything.”</p>
<p>She wanted to say “Better than Helen's?” but restrained herself.</p>
<p>“I was ever so long doing it; I thought I wouldn't finish it in time.”</p>
<p>He saw with terror that she meditated a descent upon him; a kiss was in
the air. She moved forward; then, to his extreme relief, the door opened
and the elders arriving saved him.</p>
<p>There were Father and Mother, Uncle Samuel and Aunt Amy, all with
presents, faces of birthday tolerance and “do-as-you-please-to-day, dear”
expressions.</p>
<p>The Rev. Herbert Cole was forty years of age, rector of St. James's,
Polchester, during the last ten years, and marked out for greater
preferment in the near future. To be a rector at thirty is unusual, but he
had great religious gifts, preached an admirable “as-man-to-man” sermon,
and did not believe in thinking about more than he could see. He was an
excellent father in the abstract sense, but the parish absorbed too much
of his time to allow of intimacies with anyone.</p>
<p>Mrs. Cole was the most placid lady in Europe. She had a comfortable
figure, but was not stout, here a dimple and there a dimple. Nothing could
disturb her. Children, servants, her husband's sermons, district visiting,
her Tuesday “at homes,” the butcher, the dean's wife, the wives of the
canons, the Polchester climate, bills, clothes, other women's clothes—over
all these rocks of peril in the sea of daily life her barque happily
floated. Some ill-natured people thought her stupid, but in her younger
days she had liked Trollope's novels in the Cornhill, disapproved placidly
of “Jane Eyre,” and admired Tennyson, so that she could not be considered
unliterary.</p>
<p>She was economical, warm-hearted, loved her children, talked only the
gentlest scandal, and was a completely happy woman—all this in the
placidest way in the world. Miss Amy Trefusis, her sister, was very
different, being thin both in her figure and her emotions. She skirted
tempestuously over the surface of things, was the most sentimental of
human beings, was often in tears over reminiscences of books or the
weather, was deeply religious in a superficial way, and really—although
she would have been entirely astonished had you told her so—cared
for no one in the world but herself. She was dressed always in dark
colours, with the high shoulders of the day, elegant bonnets and little
chains that jingled as she moved. In her soul she feared and distrusted
children, but she did not know this. She did know, however, that she
feared and distrusted her brother Samuel.</p>
<p>Her brother Samuel was all that the Trefusis family, as a conservative
body who believed in tradition, had least reason for understanding. He had
been a failure from the first moment of his entry into the Grammar School
in Polchester thirty-five years before this story. He had continued a
failure at Winchester and at Christ Church, Oxford. He had desired to be a
painter; he had broken from the family and gone to study Art in Paris. He
had starved and starved, was at death's door, was dragged home, and there
suddenly had relapsed into Polchester, lived first on his father, then on
his brother-in-law, painted about the town, painted, made cynical remarks
about the Polcastrians, painted, made blasphemous remarks about the
bishop, the dean and all the canons, painted, and refused to leave his
brother-in-law's house. He was a scandal, of course; he was fat, untidy,
wore a blue tam-o'-shanter when he was “out,” and sometimes went down
Orange Street in carpet slippers.</p>
<p>He was a scandal, but what are you to do if a relative is obstinate and
refuses to go? At least make him shave, say the wives of the canons. But
no one had ever made Samuel Trefusis do anything that he did not want to
do. He was sometimes not shaved for three whole days and nights. At any
rate, there he is. It is of no use saying that he does not exist, as many
of the Close ladies try to do. And at least he does not paint strange
women; he prefers flowers and cows and the Polchester woods, although
anything less like cows, flowers and woods, Mrs. Sampson, wife of the
Dean, who once had a water-colour in the Academy, says she has never seen.
Samuel Trefusis is a failure, and, what is truly awful, he does not mind;
nobody buys his pictures and he does not care; and, worst taste of all, he
laughs at his relations, although he lives on them. Nothing further need
be said.</p>
<p>To Helen, Mary and Jeremy he had always been a fascinating object,
although they realised, with that sharp worldly wisdom to be found in all
infants of tender years, that he was a failure, a dirty man, and disliked
children. He very rarely spoke to them; was once quite wildly enraged when
Mary was discovered licking his paints. (It was the paints he seemed
anxious about, not in the least the poor little thing's health, as his
sister Amy said), and had publicly been heard to say that his
brother-in-law had only got the children he deserved.</p>
<p>Nevertheless Jeremy had always been interested in him. He liked his fat
round shape, his rough, untidy grey hair, his scarlet slippers, his blue
tam-o'-shanter, the smudges of paint sometimes to be discovered on his
cheeks, and the jingling noises he made in his pocket with his money. He
was certainly more fun than Aunt Amy.</p>
<p>There, then, they all were with their presents and their birthday faces.</p>
<p>“Shall I undo them for you, darling?” of course said Aunt Amy. Jeremy
shook his head (he did not say what he thought of her) and continued to
tug at the string. He was given a large pair of scissors. He received
(from Father) a silver watch, (from Mother) a paint-box, a dark blue and
gold prayer book with a thick squashy leather cover (from Aunt Amy).</p>
<p>He was in an ecstasy. How he had longed for a watch, just such a
turnip-shaped one, and a paint-box. What colours he could make! Even Aunt
Amy's prayer book was something, with its squashy cover and silk marker
(only why did Aunt Amy never give him anything sensible?). He stood there,
his face flushed, his eyes sparkling, the watch in one hand and the
paint-box in the other. Remarks were heard like: “You mustn't poke it
with, your finger, Jerry darling, or you'll break the hands off”; and “I
thought he'd, better have the square sort, and not the tubes. They're so
squashy”; and “You'll be able to learn your Collect so easily with that
big print, Jerry dear. Very kind of you, Amy.”</p>
<p>Meanwhile he was aware that Uncle Samuel had given him nothing. There was
a little thick catch of disappointment in his throat, not because he
wanted a present, but because he liked Uncle Samuel. Suddenly, from
somewhere behind him his uncle said: “Shut your eyes, Jerry. Don't open
them until I tell you”—then rather crossly, “No, Amy, leave me
alone. I know what I'm about, thank you.”</p>
<p>Jeremy shut his eyes tight. He closed them so that the eyelids seemed to
turn right inwards and red lights flashed. He stood there for at least a
century, all in darkness, no one saying anything save that once Mary cried
“Oh!” and clapped her hands, which same cry excited him to such a pitch
that he would have dug his nails into his hands had he not so consistently
in the past bitten them that there were no nails with which to dig. He
waited. He waited. He waited. He was not eight, he was eighty when at last
Uncle Samuel said, “Now you may look.”</p>
<p>He opened his eyes and turned; for a moment the nursery, too, rocked in
the unfamiliar light. Then he saw. On the middle of the nursery carpet was
a village, a real village, six houses with red roofs, green windows and
white porches, a church with a tower and a tiny bell, an orchard with
flowers on the fruit trees, a green lawn, a street with a butcher's shop,
a post office, and a grocer's. Villager Noah, Mrs. Noah and the little
Noahs, a field with cows, horses, dogs, a farm with chickens and even two
pigs...</p>
<p>He stood, he stared, he drew a deep breath.</p>
<p>“It comes all the way from Germany,” said Aunt Amy, who always made things
uninteresting if she possibly could.</p>
<p>There was much delighted talk. Jeremy said nothing. But Uncle Samuel
understood.</p>
<p>“Glad you like it,” he said, and left the room.</p>
<p>“Aren't you pleased?” said Helen.</p>
<p>Jeremy still said nothing.</p>
<p>“Sausages. Sausages!” cried Mary, as Gladys, grinning, entered with a dish
of a lovely and pleasant smell. But Jeremy did not turn. He simply stood
there—staring.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> III </h2>
<p>It is of the essence of birthdays that they cannot maintain throughout a
long day the glorious character of their early dawning. In Polchester
thirty years ago there were no cinematographs, no theatre save for an
occasional amateur performance at the Assembly Rooms and, once and again,
a magic-lantern show. On this particular day, moreover, Mr. and Mrs. Cole
were immensely busied with preparations for some parochial tea. Miss
Trefusis had calls to make, and, of course, Uncle Samuel was invisible.
The Birthday then suddenly became no longer a birthday but an ordinary day—with
an extraordinary standard. This is why so many birthdays end in tears.</p>
<p>But Jeremy, as was usual with him, took everything quietly. He might cry
aloud about such an affair as the conquest of the wicker chair because
that did not deeply matter to him, but about the real things he was
silent. The village was one of the real things; during all the morning he
remained shut up in his soul with it, the wide world closed off from them
by many muffled doors. How had Uncle Samuel known that he had deep in his
own inside, so deep that he had not mentioned it even to himself, wanted
something just like this? Thirty years ago there were none of the presents
that there are for children now—no wonderful railways that run round
the nursery from Monte Carlo to Paris with all the stations marked; no
dolls that are so like fashionable women that you are given a manicure set
with them to keep their nails tidy; no miniature motor-cars that run of
themselves and go for miles round the floor without being wound up. Jeremy
knew none of these things, and was the happier that he did not. To such a
boy such a village was a miracle.... It had not come from Germany, as Aunt
Amy said, but from heaven. But it was even more of Uncle Samuel than the
village that he was thinking. When they started—Helen, Mary and he
in charge of the Jampot—upon their afternoon walk, he was still
asking himself the same questions. How had Uncle Samuel known so exactly?
Had it been a great trouble to bring from so far away? Had Uncle Samuel
thought it bad of him not to thank him?</p>
<p>He was lost in such considerations when the Jampot inquired of him the way
that their walk should take—it was his choice because it was his
Birthday. He had no choice. There was one walk that far exceeded all
others in glory, straight down Orange Street, straight again through the
Market, past the Assembly Rooms and the Town Hall, past the flower and
fruit stalls, and the old banana woman under the green umbrella and the
toy stall with coloured balloons, the china dogs and the nodding donkeys,
up the High Street, into the cobble-stones of the Close, whence one could
look down, between the houses on to the orchards, round the Cathedral with
the meadows, Pol Meads sloping down to the river, so through Orchard Lane
into Orange Street once again.</p>
<p>Such a walk combined every magic and delight known to the heart of man,
but it was not generally allowed, because Jeremy would drag past the
shops, the stalls in the Market Place and the walk behind the Cathedral,
whence one might sometimes see boats on the river, sheep and cows in the
meads, and, in their proper season, delight of delights—lambs.</p>
<p>They set out...</p>
<p>Thirty years ago the winter weather in Polchester was wonderful. Now, of
course, there are no hard winters, no frost, no snow, no waits, no
snowmen, and no skating on the Pol. Then there were all those things.
To-day was of a hard, glittering frost; the sun, like a round, red lacquer
tray, fell heavily, slowly through a faint pale sky that was not strong
enough to sustain it. The air had the cold, sweet twang of peppermints in
the throat. Polchester was a painted town upon a blue screen, the
Cathedral towers purple against the sky; the air was scented with burning
leaves, and cries from the town rose up clear and hard, lingering and
falling like notes of music. Somewhere they were playing football, and the
shouting was distant and regular like the tramp of armed men. “Three”
struck the Cathedral clock, as though it were calling “Open Sesame.” Other
lesser clocks repeated the challenge cry through the town. “Woppley—Woppley—Why!”
sung the man who was selling skins down Orange Street. The sky, turning
slowly from blue to gold, shone mysteriously through the glass of the
street lamps, and the sun began to wrap itself in tints of purple and
crocus and iris.</p>
<p>“Woppley—Woppley—Why!” screamed the skin-man suddenly
appearing at the top of the street.</p>
<p>“Now 'urry, Master Jeremy,” said the Jampot, “or we shall never get 'ome
this night, and I might have known you'd choose the longest walk possible.
Come along, Miss Mary, now—none of that dawdling.”</p>
<p>Jeremy, in his H.M.S. Adventure's cap and rough blue navy coat, felt
himself superior to the Jampot, so he only said, “Oh, don't bother,
Nurse,” and then in the same breath, “I'll run you down the hill, Mary,”
and before anyone could say a word there they were at the bottom of Orange
Street, as though they had fallen into a well. The sun was gone, the
golden horizon was gone—only the purple lights began to gather about
their feet and climb slowly the high black houses.</p>
<p>Mary liked this, because she now had Jeremy to herself. She began
hurriedly, so that she should lose no time:</p>
<p>“Shall I tell you a story, Jeremy? I've got a new one. Once upon a time
there were three little boys, and they lived in a wood, and an old witch
ate them, and the Princess who had heaps of jewellery and a white horse
and a lovely gold dress came, and it was snowing and the witch—”</p>
<p>This was always Mary's way. She loved to tell Jeremy interesting stories,
and he did not mind because he did not listen and could meanwhile think
his own thoughts.</p>
<p>His chief decision arrived at as he marched along was that he would keep
the village to himself; no one else should put their fingers into it,
arrange the orchard with the coloured trees, decide upon the names of the
Noah family, settle the village street in its final order, ring the bell
of the church, or milk the cows. He alone would do all these things. And,
so considering, he seemed to himself very like God. God, he supposed,
could pull Polchester about, root out a house here, another there, knock
the Assembly Rooms down and send a thunderbolt on to the apple woman's
umbrella. Well, then—so could he with his village. He walked swollen
with pride. He arrived at the first Island of Circe, namely, the window of
Mr. Thompson, the jeweller in Market Street, pressed his nose to the pane,
and refused to listen when the Jampot suggested that he should move
forward.</p>
<p>He could see the diamonds like drops of water in the sun, and the pearls
like drops of milk, and the rubies like drops of blood, but it was not of
diamonds, pearls or rubies that he was thinking—he thought only of
his village. He would ring the church bell, and then all the Noah family
should start out of the door, down the garden, up the village street... It
did not matter if one of the younger Noahs should be lazy and wish to stay
at home beneath the flowering trees of the orchard. She would not be
allowed... He was as God.. . He was as God... The butcher should go (if he
was not stuck to his shop), and even some of his cows might go.... He was
as God...</p>
<p>He heard Mary's voice in his ear.</p>
<p>“And after that they all ate chocolates with white cream and red cream,
and they sucked it off pins, and there were hard bits and soft bits, and
the Princess (she was a frog now. You remember, don't you, Jeremy? The
witch turned her) hotted the oven like cook has, with black doors, and
hotted it and hotted it, but suddenly there was a noise—”</p>
<p>And, on the other side, the Jampot's voice: “You naughty boy, stoppin'
'ere for everyone to see, just because it's your birthday, which I wish
there wasn't no birthdays, nor there wouldn't be if I had my way.”</p>
<p>Jeremy turned from Mr. Thompson's window, a scornful smile on his face:</p>
<p>“I'm bigger'n you, Nurse,” he said. “If I said out loud, 'I won't go,' I
wouldn't go, and no one could make me.”</p>
<p>“Well, come along, then,” said Nurse.</p>
<p>“Don't be so stupid, Jerry,” said Helen calmly. “If a policeman came and
said you had to go home you'd have to go.”</p>
<p>“No I wouldn't,” said Jeremy.</p>
<p>“Then they'd put you in prison.”</p>
<p>“They could.”</p>
<p>“They'd hang you, perhaps.”</p>
<p>“They could,” replied Jeremy.</p>
<p>Farther than this argument cannot go, so Helen shrugged her shoulders and
said: “You are silly.”</p>
<p>And they all moved forward.</p>
<p>He found then that this new sense or God-like power detracted a little
from the excitements of the Market Place, although the flower-stall was
dazzling with flowers; there was a new kind of pig that lifted its tail
and lowered it again on the toy stall, and the apple-woman was as fat as
ever and had thick clumps of yellow bananas hanging most richly around her
head. They ascended the High Street and reached the Close. It was
half-past three, and the Cathedral bells had begun to ring for evensong.
All the houses in the Close were painted with a pale yellow light; across
the long green Cathedral lawn thin black shadows like the fingers of
giants pointed to the Cathedral door. All was so silent here that the
bells danced against the houses and back again, the echoes lingering in
the high elms and mingling with the placid cooing of the rooks.</p>
<p>“There's Mrs. Sampson,” said Jeremy. “Aunt Amy says she's a wicked woman.
Do you think she's a wicked woman, Nurse?” He gazed at the stout figure
with interest. If he were truly God he would turn her into a rabbit. This
thought amused him, and he began to laugh.</p>
<p>“You naughty boy; now come along, do,” said the Jampot, who distrusted
laughter in Jerry.</p>
<p>“I'll ring the bells when I grow up,” he said, “and I'll ring them in the
middle of the night, so that everyone will have to go to church when they
don't want to. I'll be able to do what I like when I grow up.”</p>
<p>“No, you won't,” said Helen. “Father and Mother can't do what they like.”</p>
<p>“Yes they can,” said Jeremy.</p>
<p>“No they can't,” answered Helen, “or they would.”</p>
<p>“So they do,” said Jeremy—“silly.”</p>
<p>“Silly yourself,” said Helen very calmly, because she knew very well that
she was not silly.</p>
<p>“Now, children, stop it, do,” said the Jampot.</p>
<p>Jeremy's sense of newly received power reached its climax when they walked
round the Close and reached the back of the Cathedral. I know that now,
both for Jeremy and me, that prospect has dwindled into its proper
grown-up proportions, but how can a man, be he come to threescore and ten
and more, ever forget the size, the splendour, the stupendous extravagance
of that early vision?</p>
<p>Jeremy saw that day the old fragment of castle wall, the green expanse
falling like a sheeted waterfall from the Cathedral heights, the blue line
of river flashing in the evening sun between the bare-boughed trees, the
long spaces of black shadow spreading slowly over the colour, as though it
were all being rolled up and laid away for another day; the brown frosty
path of the Rope Walk, the farther bank climbing into fields and hedges,
ending in the ridge of wood, black against the golden sky. And all so
still! As the children stood there they could catch nestlings' faint
cries, stirrings of dead leaves and twigs, as birds and beasts moved to
their homes; the cooing of the rooks about the black branches seemed to
promise that this world should be for ever tranquil, for ever cloistered
and removed; the sun, red and flaming above the dark wood, flung white
mists hither and thither to veil its departure. The silence deepened, the
last light flamed on the river and died upon the hill.</p>
<p>“Now, children, come along do,” said the Jampot who had been held in spite
of herself, and would pay for it, she knew, in rheumatism to-morrow. It
was then that Jeremy's God-flung sense of power, born from that moment
early in the day when he had sat in the wicker chair, reached its climax.
He stood there, his legs apart, looking upon the darkening world and felt
that he could do anything—anything...</p>
<p>At any rate, there was one thing that he could do, disobey the Jampot.</p>
<p>“I'm not coming,” he said, “till I choose.”</p>
<p>“You wicked boy!” she cried, her temper rising with the evening chills,
her desire for a cup of hot tea, and an aching longing for a comfortable
chair. “When everyone's been so good to you to-day and the things you've
been given and all—why, it's a wicked shame.”</p>
<p>The Jampot, who was a woman happily without imagination, saw a naughty
small boy spoiled and needing the slipper.</p>
<p>A rook, taking a last look at the world before retiring to rest, watching
from his leafless bough, saw a mortal spirit defying the universe, and
sympathised with it.</p>
<p>“I shall tell your mother,” said the Jampot. “Now come, Master Jeremy, be
a good boy.”</p>
<p>“Oh, don't bother, Nurse,” he answered impatiently. “You're such a fuss.”</p>
<p>She realised in that moment that he was suddenly beyond her power, that he
would never be within it again. She had nursed him for eight years, she
had loved him in her own way; she, dull perhaps in the ways of the world,
but wise in the ways of nurses, ways that are built up of surrender and
surrender, gave him, then and there, to the larger life...</p>
<p>“You may behave as you like, Master Jeremy,” she said. “It won't be for
long that I'll have the dealing with you, praise be. You'll be going to
school next September, and then we'll see what'll happen to your wicked
pride.”</p>
<p>“School!” he turned upon her, his eyes wide and staring.</p>
<p>“School!” he stared at them all.</p>
<p>The world tumbled from him. In his soul was a confusion of triumph and
dismay, of excitement and loneliness, of the sudden falling from him of
all old standards, old horizons, of pride and humility... How little now
was the Village to him. He looked at them to see whether they could
understand. They could not.</p>
<p>Very quietly he followed them home. His birthday had achieved its
climax...</p>
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