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<h2> CHAPTER XIV </h2>
<h3> A WALK ABROAD </h3>
<p>Thyme Dallison, in the midst of her busy life, found leisure to record her
recollections and ideas in the pages of old school notebooks. She had no
definite purpose in so doing, nor did she desire the solace of luxuriating
in her private feelings—this she would have scorned as out of date
and silly. It was done from the fulness of youthful energy, and from the
desire to express oneself that was “in the air.” It was everywhere, that
desire: among her fellow-students, among her young men friends, in her
mother's drawing-room, and her aunt's studio. Like sentiment and marriage
to the Victorian miss, so was this duty to express herself to Thyme; and,
going hand-in-hand with it, the duty to have a good and jolly youth. She
never read again the thoughts which she recorded, she took no care to lock
them up, knowing that her liberty, development, and pleasure were sacred
things which no one would dream of touching—she kept them stuffed
down in a drawer among her handkerchiefs and ties and blouses, together
with the indelible fragment of a pencil.</p>
<p>This journal, naive and slipshod, recorded without order the current
impression of things on her mind.</p>
<p>In the early morning of the 4th of May she sat, night-gowned, on the foot
of her white bed, with chestnut hair all fluffy about her neck, eyes
bright and cheeks still rosy with sleep, scribbling away and rubbing one
bare foot against the other in the ecstasy of self-expression. Now and
then, in the middle of a sentence, she would stop and look out of the
window, or stretch herself deliciously, as though life were too full of
joy for her to finish anything.</p>
<p>“I went into grandfather's room yesterday, and stayed while he was
dictating to the little model. I do think grandfather's so splendid.
Martin says an enthusiast is worse than useless; people, he says, can't
afford to dabble in ideas or dreams. He calls grandfather's idea
paleolithic. I hate him to be laughed at. Martin's so cocksure. I don't
think he'd find many men of eighty who'd bathe in the Serpentine all the
year round, and do his own room, cook his own food, and live on about
ninety pounds a year out of his pension of three hundred, and give all the
rest away. Martin says that's unsound, and the 'Book of Universal
Brotherhood' rot. I don't care if it is; it's fine to go on writing it as
he does all day. Martin admits that. That's the worst of him: he's so
cool, you can't score him off; he seems to be always criticising you; it
makes me wild.... That little model is a hopeless duffer. I could have
taken it all down in half the time. She kept stopping and looking up with
that mouth of hers half open, as if she had all day before her.
Grandfather's so absorbed he doesn't notice; he likes to read the thing
over and over, to hear how the words sound. That girl would be no good at
any sort of work, except 'sitting,' I suppose. Aunt B. used to say she sat
well. There's something queer about her face; it reminds me a little of
that Botticelli Madonna in the National Gallery, the full-face one; not so
much in the shape as in the expression—almost stupid, and yet as if
things were going to happen to her. Her hands and arms are pretty, and her
feet are smaller than mine. She's two years older than me. I asked her why
she went in for being a model, which is beastly work. She said she was
glad to get anything! I asked her why she didn't go into a shop or into
service. She didn't answer at once, and then said she hadn't had any
recommendations—didn't know where to try; then, all of a sudden, she
grew quite sulky, and said she didn't want to....”</p>
<p>Thyme paused to pencil in a sketch of the little model's profile....</p>
<p>“She had on a really pretty frock, quite simple and well made—it
must have cost three or four pounds. She can't be so very badly off, or
somebody gave it her....”</p>
<p>And again Thyme paused.</p>
<p>“She looked ever so much prettier in it than she used to in her old brown
skirt, I thought .... Uncle Hilary came to dinner last night. We talked of
social questions; we always discuss things when he comes. I can't help
liking Uncle Hilary; he has such kind eyes, and he's so gentle that you
never lose your temper with him. Martin calls him weak and unsatisfactory
because he's not in touch with life. I should say it was more as if he
couldn't bear to force anyone to do anything; he seems to see both sides
of every question, and he's not good at making up his mind, of course.
He's rather like Hamlet might have been, only nobody seems to know now
what Hamlet was really like. I told him what I thought about the lower
classes. One can talk to him. I hate father's way of making feeble little
jokes, as if nothing were serious. I said I didn't think it was any use to
dabble; we ought to go to the root of everything. I said that money and
class distinctions are two bogeys we have got to lay. Martin says, when it
comes to real dealing with social questions and the poor, all the people
we know are amateurs. He says that we have got to shake ourselves free of
all the old sentimental notions, and just work at putting everything to
the test of Health. Father calls Martin a 'Sanitist'; and Uncle Hilary
says that if you wash people by law they'll all be as dirty again
tomorrow....”</p>
<p>Thyme paused again. A blackbird in the garden of the Square was uttering a
long, low, chuckling trill. She ran to the window and peeped out. The bird
was on a plane-tree, and, with throat uplifted, was letting through his
yellow beak that delicious piece of self-expression. All things he seemed
to praise—the sky, the sun, the trees, the dewy grass, himself:</p>
<p>'You darling!' thought Thyme. With a shudder of delight she dropped her
notebook back into the drawer, flung off her nightgown, and flew into her
bath.</p>
<p>That same morning she slipped out quietly at ten o'clock. Her Saturdays
were free of classes, but she had to run the gauntlet of her mother's
liking for her company and her father's wish for her to go with him to
Richmond and play golf.</p>
<p>For on Saturdays Stephen almost always left the precincts of the Courts
before three o'clock. Then, if he could induce his wife or daughter to
accompany him, he liked to get a round or two in preparation for Sunday,
when he always started off at half-past ten and played all day. If Cecilia
and Thyme failed him, he would go to his club, and keep himself in touch
with every kind of social movement by reading the reviews.</p>
<p>Thyme walked along with her head up and a wrinkle in her brow, as though
she were absorbed in serious reflection; if admiring glances were flung at
her, she did not seem aware of them. Passing not far from Hilary's, she
entered the Broad Walk, and crossed it to the farther end.</p>
<p>On a railing, stretching out his long legs and observing the passers-by,
sat her cousin, Martin Stone. He got down as she came up.</p>
<p>“Late again,” he said. “Come on!”</p>
<p>“Where are we going first?” Thyme asked.</p>
<p>“The Notting Hill district's all we can do to-day if we're to go again to
Mrs. Hughs'. I must be down at the hospital this afternoon.”</p>
<p>Thyme frowned. “I do envy you living by yourself, Martin. It's silly
having to live at home.”</p>
<p>Martin did not answer, but one nostril of his long nose was seen to curve,
and Thyme acquiesced in this without remark. They walked for some minutes
between tall houses, looking about them calmly. Then Martin said: “All
Purceys round here.”</p>
<p>Thyme nodded. Again there was silence; but in these pauses there was no
embarrassment, no consciousness apparently that it was silence, and their
eyes—those young, impatient, interested eyes—were for ever
busy observing.</p>
<p>“Boundary line. We shall be in a patch directly.”</p>
<p>“Black?” asked Thyme.</p>
<p>“Dark blue—black farther on.”</p>
<p>They were passing down a long, grey, curving road, whose narrow houses,
hopelessly unpainted, showed marks of grinding poverty. The Spring wind
was ruffling straw and little bits of paper in the gutters; under the
bright sunlight a bleak and bitter struggle seemed raging. Thyme said:</p>
<p>“This street gives me a hollow feeling.”</p>
<p>Martin nodded. “Worse than the real article. There's half a mile of this.
Here it's all grim fighting. Farther on they've given it up.”</p>
<p>And still they went on up the curving street, with its few pinched shops
and its unending narrow grimness.</p>
<p>At the corner of a by-street Martin said: “We'll go down here.”</p>
<p>Thyme stood still, wrinkling her nose. Martin eyed her.</p>
<p>“Don't funk!”</p>
<p>“I'm not funking, Martin, only I can't stand the smells.”</p>
<p>“You'll have to get used to them.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I know; but—but I forgot my eucalyptus.”</p>
<p>The young man took out a handkerchief which had not yet been unfolded.</p>
<p>“Here, take mine.”</p>
<p>“They do make me feel so—it's a shame to take yours,” and she took
the handkerchief.</p>
<p>“That's all right,” said Martin. “Come on!”</p>
<p>The houses of this narrow street, inside and out, seemed full of women.
Many of them had babies in their arms; they were working or looking out of
windows or gossiping on doorsteps. And all stopped to stare as the young
couple passed. Thyme stole a look at her companion. His long stride had
not varied; there was the usual pale, observant, sarcastic expression on
his face. Clenching the handkerchief in readiness, and trying to imitate
his callous air, she looked at a group of five women on the nearest
doorstep.</p>
<p>Three were seated and two were standing. One of these, a young woman with
a round, open face, was clearly very soon to have a child; the other, with
a short, dark face and iron-grey, straggling hair, was smoking a clay
pipe. Of the three seated, one, quite young, had a face as grey white as a
dirty sheet, and a blackened eye; the second, with her ragged dress
disarranged, was nursing a baby; the third, in the centre, on the top
step, with red arms akimbo, her face scored with drink, was shouting
friendly obscenities to a neighbour in the window opposite. In Thyme's
heart rose the passionate feeling, 'How disgusting! how disgusting!' and
since she did not dare to give expression to it, she bit her lips and
turned her head from them, resenting, with all a young girl's horror, that
her sex had given her away. The women stared at her, and in those faces,
according to their different temperaments, could be seen first the same
vague, hard interest that had been Thyme's when she first looked at them,
then the same secret hostility and criticism, as though they too felt that
by this young girl's untouched modesty, by her gushed cheeks and unsoiled
clothes, their sex had given them away. With contemptuous movements of
their lips and bodies, on that doorstep they proclaimed their emphatic
belief in the virtue and reality of their own existences and in the vice
and unreality of her intruding presence.</p>
<p>“Give the doll to Bill; 'e'd make 'er work for once, the—-” In a
burst of laughter the epithet was lost.</p>
<p>Martin's lips curled.</p>
<p>“Purple just here,” he said.</p>
<p>Thyme's cheeks were crimson.</p>
<p>At the end of the little street he stopped before a shop.</p>
<p>“Come on,” he said, “you'll see the sort of place where they buy their
grub.”</p>
<p>In the doorway were standing a thin brown spaniel, a small fair woman with
a high, bald forehead, from which the hair was gleaned into curlpapers,
and a little girl with some affection of the skin.</p>
<p>Nodding coolly, Martin motioned them aside. The shop was ten feet square;
its counters, running parallel to two of the walls, were covered with
plates of cake, sausages, old ham-bones, peppermint sweets, and household
soap; there was also bread, margarine, suet in bowls, sugar, bloaters—many
bloaters—Captain's biscuits, and other things besides. Two or three
dead rabbits hung against the wall. All was uncovered, so that what flies
there were sat feeding socialistically. Behind the counter a girl of
seventeen was serving a thin-faced woman with portions of a cheese which
she was holding down with her strong, dirty hand, while she sawed it with
a knife. On the counter, next the cheese, sat a quiet-looking cat.</p>
<p>They all glanced round at the two young people, who stood and waited.</p>
<p>“Finish what you're at,” said Martin, “then give me three pennyworth of
bull's-eyes.”</p>
<p>The girl, with a violent effort, finished severing the cheese. The
thin-faced woman took it, and, coughing above it, went away. The girl, who
could not take her eyes off Thyme, now served them with three pennyworth
of bull's-eyes, which she took out with her fingers, for they had stuck.
Putting them in a screw of newspaper, she handed them to Martin. The young
man, who had been observing negligently, touched Thyme's elbow. She, who
had stood with eyes cast down, now turned. They went out, Martin handing
the bull's-eyes to the little girl with an affection of the skin.</p>
<p>The street now ended in a wide road formed of little low houses.</p>
<p>“Black,” said Martin, “here; all down this road-casual labour, criminals,
loafers, drunkards, consumps. Look at the faces!”</p>
<p>Thyme raised her eyes obediently. In this main thoroughfare it was not as
in the by-street, and only dull or sullen glances, or none at all, were
bent on her. Some of the houses had ragged plants on the window-sills; in
one window a canary was singing. Then, at a bend, they came into a blacker
reach of human river. Here were outbuildings, houses with broken windows,
houses with windows boarded up, fried-fish shops, low public-houses,
houses without doors. There were more men here than women, and those men
were wheeling barrows full of rags and bottles, or not even full of rags
and bottles; or they were standing by the public-houses gossiping or
quarrelling in groups of three or four; or very slowly walking in the
gutters, or on the pavements, as though trying to remember if they were
alive. Then suddenly some young man with gaunt violence in his face would
pass, pushing his barrow desperately, striding fiercely by. And every now
and then, from a fried-fish or hardware shop, would come out a man in a
dirty apron to take the sun and contemplate the scene, not finding in it,
seemingly, anything that in any way depressed his spirit. Amongst the
constant, crawling, shifting stream of passengers were seen women carrying
food wrapped up in newspaper, or with bundles beneath their shawls. The
faces of these women were generally either very red and coarse or of a
sort of bluish-white; they wore the expression of such as know themselves
to be existing in the way that Providence has arranged they should exist.
No surprise, revolt, dismay, or shame was ever to be seen on those faces;
in place of these emotions a drab and brutish acquiescence or mechanical
coarse jocularity. To pass like this about their business was their
occupation each morning of the year; it was needful to accept it. Not
having any hope of ever, being different, not being able to imagine any
other life, they were not so wasteful of their strength as to attempt
either to hope or to imagine. Here and there, too, very slowly passed old
men and women, crawling along, like winter bees who, in some strange and
evil moment, had forgotten to die in the sunlight of their toil, and, too
old to be of use, had been chivied forth from their hive to perish slowly
in the cold twilight of their days.</p>
<p>Down the centre of the street Thyme saw a brewer's dray creeping its way
due south under the sun. Three horses drew it, with braided tails and
beribboned manes, the brass glittering on their harness. High up, like a
god, sat the drayman, his little slits of eyes above huge red cheeks fixed
immovably on his horses' crests. Behind him, with slow, unceasing crunch,
the dray rolled, piled up with hogsheads, whereon the drayman's mate lay
sleeping. Like the slumbrous image of some mighty unrelenting Power, it
passed, proud that its monstrous bulk contained all the joy and blessing
those shadows on the pavement had ever known.</p>
<p>The two young people emerged on to the high road running east and west.</p>
<p>“Cross here,” said Martin, “and cut down into Kensington. Nothing more of
interest now till we get to Hound Street. Purceys and Purceys all round
about this part.”</p>
<p>Thyme shook herself.</p>
<p>“O Martin, let's go down a road where there's some air. I feel so dirty.”
She put her hand up to her chest.</p>
<p>“There's one here,” said Martin.</p>
<p>They turned to the left into a road that had many trees. Now that she
could breathe and look about her, Thyme once more held her head erect and
began to swing her arms.</p>
<p>“Martin, something must be done!”</p>
<p>The young doctor did not reply; his face still wore its pale, sarcastic,
observant look. He gave her arm a squeeze with a half-contemptuous smile.</p>
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