<SPAN name="vol_1_chap_07"></SPAN>
<h3>Volume One--Chapter Seven.</h3>
<h4>Auntie Hamps.</h4>
<p>Mrs Hamps had splendidly arrived. The atmosphere of the sitting-room was changed.
Maggie, smiling, wore her second-best black silk apron. Clara, smiling and laughing, wore
a clean long white pinafore. Mrs Nixon, with her dreamy eyes less vacant than usual,
greeted Mrs Hamps effusively, and effusively gave humble thanks for kind inquiries after
her health. A stranger might have thought that these women were strongly attached to one
another by ties of affection and respect. Edwin never understood how his sisters,
especially Maggie, could practise such vast and eternal hypocrisy with his aunt. As for
him, his aunt acted on him now, as generally, like a tonic. Some effluence from her
quickened him. He put away the worry in connection with his father, and gave himself up to
the physical pleasures of tea.</p>
<p>Aunt Clara was a handsome woman. She had been called—but not by men whose manners
and code she would have approved—‘a damned fine woman.’ Her age was
about forty, which at that period, in a woman’s habit of mind, was the equivalent of
about fifty to-day. Her latest photograph was considered to be very successful. It showed
her standing behind a velvet chair and leaning her large but still shapely bust slightly
over the chair. Her forearms, ruffled and braceleted, lay along the fringed back of the
chair, and from one negligent hand depended a rose. A heavy curtain came downwards out of
nothing into the picture, and the end of it lay coiled and draped on the seat of the
chair. The great dress was of slate-coloured silk, with sleeves tight to the elbow, and
thence, from a ribbon-bow, broadening to a wide, triangular climax that revealed
quantities of lace at the wrists. The pointed ends of the sleeves were picked out with
squares of velvet. A short and highly ornamental fringed and looped flounce waved grandly
out behind from the waist to the level of the knees; and the stomacher recalled the
ornamentation of the flounce; and both the stomacher and flounce gave contrasting value to
the severe plainness of the skirt, designed to emphasise the quality of the silk. Round
the neck was a lace collarette to match the furniture of the wrists, and the broad ends of
the collarette were crossed on the bosom and held by a large jet brooch. Above that you
saw a fine regular face, with a firm hard mouth and a very straight nose and dark
eyebrows; small ears weighted with heavy jet ear-rings.</p>
<p>The photograph could not render the clear perfection of Aunt Clara’s rosy skin;
she had the colour and the flashing eye of a girl. But it did justice to her really
magnificent black hair. This hair was all her own, and the coiffure seemed as ample as a
judge’s wig. From the low forehead the hair was parted exactly in the middle for
about two inches; then plaited bands crossed and recrossed the scalp in profusion, forming
behind a pattern exceedingly complicated, and down either side of the head, now behind the
ear, now hiding it, now resting on the shoulders, now hanging clear of them, fell long
multitudinous glossy curls. These curls—one of them in the photograph reached as far
as the stomacher—could not have been surpassed in Bursley.</p>
<p>She was a woman of terrific vitality. Her dead sister had been nothing in comparison
with her. She had a glorious digestion, and was the envy of her brother-in-law—who
suffered much from biliousness—because she could eat with perfect impunity hot
buttered toast and raw celery in large quantities. Further, she had independent means, and
no children to cause anxieties. Yet she was always, as the phrase went, ‘bearing
up,’ or, as another phrase went, ‘leaning hard.’ Frances Ridley Havergal
was her favourite author, and Frances Ridley Havergal’s little book <i>Lean
Hard</i>, was kept on her dressing-table. (The girls, however, averred that she never
opened it.) Aunt Clara’s spiritual life must be imagined as a continual, almost
physical leaning on Christ. Nevertheless she never complained, and she was seldom
depressed. Her desire, and her achievement, was to be bright, to take everything
cheerfully, to look obstinately on the best side of things, and to instil this religion
into others.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Two.</h4>
<p>Thus, when it was announced that father had been called out unexpectedly, leaving an
order that they were not to wait for him, she said gaily that they had better be obedient
and begin, though it would have been more agreeable to wait for father. And she said how
beautiful the tea was, and how beautiful the toast, and how beautiful the strawberry-jam,
and how beautiful the pikelets. She would herself pour some hot water into the slop basin,
and put a pikelet on a plate thereon, covered, to keep warm for father. She would not hear
a word about the toast being a little hard, and when Maggie in her curious quiet way
‘stuck her out’ that the toast was in fact hard, she said that that precise
degree of hardness was the degree which she, for herself, preferred. Then she talked of
jams, and mentioned gooseberry-jam, whereupon Clara privately put her tongue out, with the
quickness of a snake, to signal to Maggie.</p>
<p>“Ours isn’t good this year,” said Maggie.</p>
<p>“I told auntie we weren’t so set up with it, a fortnight ago,” said
Clara simply, like a little angel.</p>
<p>“Did you, dear?” Mrs Hamps exclaimed, with great surprise, almost with
shocked surprise. “I’m sure it’s beautiful. I was quite looking forward
to tasting it; quite! I know what your gooseberry-jam is.”</p>
<p>“Would you like to try it now?” Maggie suggested. “But we’ve
warned you.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I don’t want to trouble you <i>now</i>. We’re all so cosy here.
Any time—”</p>
<p>“No trouble, auntie,” said Clara, with her most captivating and innocent
smile.</p>
<p>“Well, if you talk about ‘warning’ me, of course I must insist on
having some,” said Auntie Clara.</p>
<p>Clara jumped up, passed behind Mrs Hamps, making a contemptuous face at those curls as
she did so, and ran gracefully down to the kitchen.</p>
<p>“Here,” she said crossly to Mrs Nixon. “A pot of that gooseberry,
please. A small one will do. She knows it’s short of sugar, and so she’s
determined to try it, just out of spite; and nothing will stop her.”</p>
<p>Clara returned smiling to the tea-table, and Maggie neatly unsealed the jam; and Auntie
Clara, with a face beaming with pleasurable anticipation, helped herself circumspectly to
a spoonful.</p>
<p>“Beautiful!” she murmured.</p>
<p>“Don’t you think it’s a bit tart?” Maggie asked.</p>
<p>“Oh no!” protestingly.</p>
<p>“<i>Don’t</i> you?” asked Clara, with an air of delighted deferential
astonishment.</p>
<p>“Oh <i>no</i>!” Mrs Hamps repeated. “It’s beautiful!” She
did not smack her lips over it, because she would have considered it unladylike to smack
her lips, but by less offensive gestures she sought to convey her unbounded pleasure in
the jam. “How much sugar did you put in?” she inquired after a while.
“Half and half?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Maggie.</p>
<p>“They do say gooseberries were a tiny bit sour this year, owing to the
weather,” said Mrs Hamps reflectively.</p>
<p>Clara kicked Edwin under the table, as it were viciously, but her delightful innocent
smile, directed vaguely upon Mrs Hamps, did not relax. Such duplicity passed Edwin’s
comprehension; it seemed to him purposeless. Yet he could not quite deny that there might
be a certain sting, a certain insinuation, in his auntie’s last remark.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Three.</h4>
<p>Then Mr Clayhanger entered, blowing forth a long breath as if trying to repulse the
oppressive heat of the July afternoon. He came straight to the table, with a slightly
preoccupied air, quickly, his arms motionless at his sides, and slanting a little
outwards. Mr Clayhanger always walked like this, with motionless arms so that in spite of
a rather clumsy and heavy step, the upper part of him appeared to glide along. He shook
hands genially with Auntie Clara, greeting her almost as grandiosely as she greeted him,
putting on for a moment the grand manner, not without dignity. Each admired the other.
Each often said that the other was ‘wonderful.’ Each undoubtedly flattered the
other, made a fuss of the other. Mr Clayhanger’s admiration was the greater. The
bitterest thing that Edwin had ever heard Maggie say was: “It’s something to
be thankful for that she’s his deceased wife’s sister!” And she had said
the bitter thing with such quiet bitterness! Edwin had not instantly perceived the point
of it.</p>
<p>Darius Clayhanger then sat down, with a thud, snatched at the cup of tea which Maggie
had placed before him, and drank half of it with a considerable in-drawing noise. No one
asked where or why he had been detained; it was not etiquette to do so. If father had been
‘called away,’ or had ‘had to go away,’ or was ‘kept
somewhere,’ the details were out of deference allowed to remain in mystery,
respected by curiosity ... ‘Father-business.’ ... All business was sacred. He
himself had inculcated this attitude.</p>
<p>In a short silence the sound of the bell that the carman rang before the tram started
for Hanbridge floated in through the open window.</p>
<p>“There’s the tram!” observed Auntie Clara, apparently with warm and
special interest in the phenomena of the tram. Then another little silence.</p>
<p>“Auntie,” said Clara, writhing about youthfully on her chair.</p>
<p>“Can’t ye sit still a bit?” the father asked, interrupting her
roughly, but with good humour. “Ye’ll be falling off th’ chair in a
minute.”</p>
<p>Clara blushed swiftly, and stopped.</p>
<p>“Yes, love?” Auntie Clara encouraged her. It was as if Auntie Clara had
said: “Your dear father is of course quite right, more than right, to insist on your
sitting properly at table. However, do not take the correction too much to heart. I
sympathise with all your difficulties.”</p>
<p>“I was only going to ask you,” Clara went on, in a weaker, stammering
voice, “if you knew that Edwin’s left school to-day.” Her archness had
deserted her.</p>
<p>“Mischievous little thing!” thought Edwin. “Why must she deliberately
go and draw attention to that?” And he too blushed, feeling as if he owed an apology
to the company for having left school.</p>
<p>“Oh yes!” said Auntie Clara with eager benevolence. “I’ve got
something to say about that to my nephew.”</p>
<p>Mr Clayhanger searched in a pocket of his alpaca, and drew forth an open envelope.</p>
<p>“Here’s the lad’s report, auntie,” said he. “Happen
ye’d like to look at it.”</p>
<p>“I should indeed!” she replied fervently. “I’m sure it’s
a very good one.”</p>
<hr>
<h4>Four.</h4>
<p>She took the paper, and assumed her spectacles.</p>
<p>“Conduct—Excellent,” she read, poring with enthusiasm over the
document. And she read again: “Conduct—Excellent.” Then she went down
the list of subjects, declaiming the number of marks for each; and at the end she read:
“Position in class next term: Third. Splendid, Eddy!” she exclaimed.</p>
<p>“I thought you were second,” said Clara, in her sharp manner.</p>
<p>Edwin blushed again, and hesitated.</p>
<p>“Eh? What’s that? What’s that?” his father demanded. “I
didn’t notice that. Third?”</p>
<p>“Charlie Orgreave beat me in the examination,” Edwin muttered.</p>
<p>“Well, that’s a pretty how d’ye do!” said his father.
“Going down one! Ye ought to ha’ been first instead o’ third. And would
ha’ been, happen, if ye’d pegged at it.”</p>
<p>“Now I won’t have that! I won’t have it!” Auntie Clara
protested, laughingly showing her fine teeth and gazing first at Darius, and then at
Edwin, from under her spectacles, her head being thrown back and the curls hanging far
behind. “No one shall say that Edwin doesn’t work, not even his father, while
his auntie’s about! Because I know he does work! And besides, he hasn’t gone
down. It says, ‘position <i>next term</i>’—not this term. You were still
second to-day, weren’t you, my boy?”</p>
<p>“I suppose so. Yes,” Edwin answered, pulling himself together.</p>
<p>“Well! There you are!” Auntie Clara’s voice rang triumphantly. She
was opening her purse. “And <i>there</i> you are!” she repeated, popping half
a sovereign down in front of him. “That’s a little present from your auntie on
your leaving school.”</p>
<p>“Oh, auntie!” he cried feebly.</p>
<p>“Oh!” cried Clara, genuinely startled.</p>
<p>Mrs Hamps was sometimes thus astoundingly munificent. It was she who had given the
schooner to Edwin. And her presents of elaborately enveloped and costly toilet soap on the
birthdays of the children, and at Christmas, were massive. Yet Clara always maintained
that she was the meanest old thing imaginable. And Maggie had once said that she knew that
Auntie Clara made her servant eat dripping instead of butter. To give inferior food to a
servant was to Maggie the unforgivable in parsimony.</p>
<p>“Well,” Mr Clayhanger warningly inquired, “what do you say to your
aunt?”</p>
<p>“Thank you, auntie,” Edwin sheepishly responded, fingering the coin.</p>
<p>It was a princely sum. And she had stuck up for him famously in the matter of the
report. Strange that his father should not have read the report with sufficient attention
to remark the fall to third place! Anyway, that aspect of the affair was now safely over,
and it seemed to him that he had not lost much prestige by it. He would still be able to
argue with his father on terms not too unequal, he hoped.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Five.</h4>
<p>As the tea drew to an end, and the plates of toast, bread and butter, and tea-cake grew
emptier, and the slop-basin filled, and only Maggie’s flowers remained fresh and
immaculate amid the untidy débris of the meal; and as Edwin and Clara became
gradually indifferent to jam, and then inimical to it; and as the sounds of the street
took on the softer quality of summer evening, and the first filmy shades of twilight
gathered imperceptibly in the corners of the room, and Mr Clayhanger performed the
eructations which signified that he had had enough; so Mrs Hamps prepared herself for one
of her classic outbursts of feeling.</p>
<p>“Well!” she said at last, putting her spoon to the left of her cup as a
final indication that seriously she would drink no more. And she gave a great sigh.
“School over! And the only son going out into the world! How time flies!” And
she gave another great sigh, implying an immense melancholy due to this vision of the
reality of things. Then she remembered her courage, and the device of leaning hard, and
all her philosophy.</p>
<p>“But it’s all for the best!” she broke forth in a new brave tone.
“Everything is ordered for the best. We must never forget that! And I’m quite
sure that Edwin will be a very great credit to us all, with help from above.”</p>
<p>She proceeded powerfully in this strain. She brought in God, Christ, and even the Holy
Spirit. She mentioned the dangers of the world, and the disguises of the devil, and the
unspeakable advantages of a good home, and the special goodness of Mr Clayhanger and of
Maggie, yes, and of her little Clara; and the pride which they all had in Edwin, and the
unique opportunities which he had of doing good, by example, and also, soon, by precept,
for others younger than himself would begin to look up to him; and again her personal
pride in him, and her sure faith in him; and what a solemn hour it was...</p>
<p>Nothing could stop her. The girls loathed these exhibitions. Maggie always looked at
the table during their progress, and she felt as though she had done something wrong and
was ashamed of it. Clara not merely felt like a criminal—she felt like an
unrepentant criminal; she blushed, she glanced nervously about the room, and all the time
she repeated steadily in her heart a highly obscene word which she had heard at school.
This unspoken word, hurled soundlessly but savagely at her aunt in that innocent heart,
afforded much comfort to Clara in the affliction. Even Edwin, who was more lenient in all
ways than his sisters, profoundly deplored these moralisings of his aunt. They filled him
with a desire to run fast and far, to be alone at sea, or to be deep somewhere in the
bosom of the earth. He could not understand this side of his auntie’s individuality.
But there was no delivery from Mrs Hamps. The only person who could possibly have
delivered them seemed to enjoy the sinister thraldom. Mr Clayhanger listened with
appreciative and admiring nods; he appeared to be quite sincere. And Edwin could not
understand his father either. “How simple father must be!” he thought vaguely.
Whereas Clara fatalistically dismissed her father’s attitude as only one more of the
preposterously unreasonable phenomena which she was constantly meeting in life; and she
persevered grimly with her obscene word.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Six.</h4>
<p>“Eh!” said Mrs Hamps enthusiastically, after a trifling pause. “It
does me good when I think what a <i>help</i> you’ll be to your father in the
business, with that clever head of yours.”</p>
<p>She gazed at him fondly.</p>
<p>Now this was Edwin’s chance. He did not wish to be any help at all to his father
in the business. He had other plans for himself. He had never mentioned them before,
because his father had never talked to him about his future career, apparently assuming
that he would go into the business. He had been waiting for his father to begin.
“Surely,” he had said to himself “father’s bound to speak to me
sometime about what I’m going to do, and when he does I shall just tell him.”
But his father never had begun; and by timidity, negligence, and perhaps ill-luck, Edwin
had thus arrived at his last day at school with the supreme question not merely unsolved
but unattacked. Oh he blamed himself! Any ordinary boy (he thought) would have discussed
such a question naturally long ago. After all, it was not a crime, it was no cause for
shame, to wish not to be a printer. Yet he was ashamed! Absurd! He blamed himself. But he
also blamed his father. Now, however, in responding to his auntie’s remark, he could
remedy all the past by simply and boldly stating that he did not want to follow his
father. It would be unpleasant, of course, but the worst shock would be over in a moment,
like the drawing of a tooth. He had merely to utter certain words. He must utter them.
They were perfectly easy to say, and they were also of the greatest urgency. “I
don’t want to be a printer.” He mumbled them over in his mind. “I
don’t want to be a printer.” What could it matter to his father whether he was
a printer or not? Seconds, minutes, seemed to pass. He knew that if he was so
inconceivably craven as to remain silent, his self-respect would never recover from the
blow. Then, in response to Mrs Hamps’s prediction about his usefulness to his father
in the business, he said, with a false-jaunty, unconvinced, unconvincing air—</p>
<p>“Well, that remains to be seen.”</p>
<p>This was all he could accomplish. It seemed as if he had looked death itself in the
face, and drawn away.</p>
<p>“Remains to be <i>seen</i>?” Auntie Clara repeated, with a hint of startled
pain, due to this levity.</p>
<p>He was mute. No one suspected, as he sat there, so boyish, wistful, and uneasily
squirming, that he was agonised to the very centre of his being. All the time, in his
sweating soul, he kept trying to persuade himself: “I’ve given them a hint,
anyhow! I’ve given them a hint, anyhow!”</p>
<p>“Them” included everybody at the table.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Seven.</h4>
<p>Mr Clayhanger, completely ignoring Edwin’s reply to his aunt and her somewhat
shocked repetition of it, turned suddenly towards his son and said, in a manner friendly
but serious, a manner that assumed everything, a manner that begged the question,
unconscious even that there was a question—</p>
<p>“I shall be out the better part o’ to-morrow. I want ye to be sure to be in
the shop all afternoon—I’ll tell you what for downstairs.” It was
characteristic of him thus to make a mystery of business in front of the women.</p>
<p>Edwin felt the net closing about him. Then he thought of one of those
‘posers’ which often present themselves to youths of his age.</p>
<p>“But to-morrow’s Saturday,” he said, perhaps perkily. “What
about the Bible class?”</p>
<p>Six months previously a young minister of the Wesleyan Circuit, to whom Heaven had
denied both a sense of humour and a sense of honour, had committed the infamy of starting
a Bible class for big boys on Saturday afternoons. This outrage had appalled and disgusted
the boyhood of Wesleyanism in Bursley. Their afternoon for games, their only fair
afternoon in the desert of the week, to be filched from them and used against them for
such an odious purpose as a Bible class! Not only Sunday school on Sunday afternoon, but a
Bible class on Saturday afternoon! It was incredible. It was unbearable. It was gross
tyranny, and nothing else. Nevertheless the young minister had his way, by dint of meanly
calling upon parents and invoking their help. The scurvy worm actually got together a
class of twelve to fifteen boys, to the end of securing their eternal welfare. And they
had to attend the class, though they swore they never would, and they had to sing hymns,
and they had to kneel and listen to prayers, and they had to listen to the most
intolerable tedium, and to take notes of it. All this, while the sun was shining, or the
rain was raining, on fields and streets and open spaces and ponds!</p>
<p>Edwin had been trapped in the snare. His father, after only three words from the young
minister, had yielded up his son like a burnt sacrifice—and with a casual
nonchalance that utterly confounded Edwin. In vain Edwin had pointed out to his elders
that a Saturday afternoon of confinement must be bad for his health. His attention had
been directed to his eternal health. In vain he had pointed out that on wet Saturday
afternoons he frequently worked at his home-lessons, which therefore might suffer under
the régime of a Bible class. His attention had been directed to the peace which
passeth understanding. So he had been beaten, and was secretly twitted by Clara as an
abject victim. Hence it was with a keen and peculiar feeling of triumph, of hopelessly
cornering the inscrutable generation which a few months ago had cornered him, that he
demanded, perhaps perkily: “What about the Bible class?”</p>
<p>“There’ll be no more Bible classing,” said his father, with a mild
but slightly sardonic smile, as who should say: “I’m ready to make all
allowances for youth; but I must get you to understand, as gently as I can, that you
can’t keep on going to Bible classes for ever and ever.”</p>
<p>Mrs Hamps said—</p>
<p>“It won’t be as if you were at school. But I do hope you won’t
neglect to study your Bible. Eh, but I do hope you’ll always find time for that, to
your dying day!”</p>
<p>“Oh—but I say—” Edwin began, and stopped.</p>
<p>He was beaten by the mere effrontery of the replies. His father and his aunt (the
latter of whom at any rate was a firm and confessed religionist, who had been responsible
for converting Mr Clayhanger from Primitive Methodism to Wesleyan Methodism) did not
trouble to defend their new position by argument. They made no effort to reconcile it with
their position of a few months back, when the importance of heavenly welfare far exceeded
the importance of any conceivable earthly welfare. The fact was that they had no argument.
If God took precedence of knowledge and of health, he took precedence of a peddling shop!
That was unanswerable.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Eight.</h4>
<p>Edwin was dashed. His faith in humanity was dashed. These elders were not sincere. And
as Mrs Hamps continued to embroider the original theme of her exhortation about the Bible,
Edwin looked at her stealthily, and the doubt crossed his mind whether that majestic and
vital woman was ever sincere about anything, even to herself—whether the whole of
her daily existence, from her getting-up to her down-lying, was not a grandiose
pretence.</p>
<p>Not that he had the least desire to cling to the Bible class, even as an alternative to
the shop! No! He was much relieved to be rid of the Bible class. What overset him was the
crude illogicality of the new decree, and the shameless tacit admission of previous
insincerity.</p>
<p>Two hours later, as he stood idly at the window of his bedroom, watching the gas lamps
of Trafalgar Road wax brighter in the last glooms of twilight, he was still occupied with
the sham and the unreason and the lack of scruple suddenly revealed in the life of the
elder generation. Unconsciously imitating a trick of his father’s when annoyed but
calm, he nodded his head several times, and with his tongue against his teeth made the
noise which in writing is represented by ‘tut-tut.’ Yet somehow he had always
known that it would be so. At bottom, he was only pretending to himself to be shocked and
outraged.</p>
<p>His plans were no further advanced; indeed they were put back, for this Saturday
afternoon vigil in the shop would be in some sort a symbolic temporary defeat for him. Why
had he not spoken out clearly? Why was he always like a baby in presence of his father?
The future was all askew for him. He had forgotten his tremendous serious resolves. The
touch of the half-sovereign in his pocket, however, was comforting in a universe of
discomfort.</p>
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