<SPAN name="vol_3_chap_08"></SPAN>
<h3>Volume Three--Chapter Eight.</h3>
<h4>A Change of Mind.</h4>
<p>One evening, a year later, in earliest summer of 1887, Edwin and Mr Osmond Orgreave
were walking home together from Hanbridge. When they reached the corner of the street
leading to Lane End House, Osmond Orgreave said, stopping—</p>
<p>“Now you’ll come with us?” And he looked Edwin hard in the eyes, and
there was a most flattering appeal in his voice. It was some time since their eyes had met
frankly, for Edwin had recently been having experience of Mr Orgreave’s methods in
financial controversy, and it had not been agreeable.</p>
<p>After an instant Edwin said heartily—</p>
<p>“Yes, I think I’ll come. Of course I should like to. But I’ll let you
know.”</p>
<p>“To-night?”</p>
<p>“Yes, to-night.”</p>
<p>“I shall tell my wife you’re coming.”</p>
<p>Mr Orgreave waved a hand, and passed with a certain decorative gaiety down the street.
His hair was now silvern, but it still curled in the old places, and his gestures had
apparently not aged at all.</p>
<p>Mr and Mrs Orgreave were going to London for the Jubilee celebrations. So far as their
family was concerned, they were going alone, because Osmond had insisted humorously that
he wanted a rest from his children. But he had urgently invited Edwin to accompany them.
At first Edwin had instinctively replied that it was impossible. He could not leave home.
He had never been to London; a journey to London presented itself to him as an immense
enterprise, almost as a piece of culpable self-indulgence. And then, under the stimulus of
Osmond’s energetic and adventurous temperament, he had said to himself, “Why
not? Why shouldn’t I?”</p>
<p>The arguments favoured his going. It was absurd and scandalous that he had never been
to London: he ought for his self-respect to depart thither at once. The legend of the
Jubilee, spectacular, processional, historic, touched his imagination. Whenever he thought
of it, his fancy saw pennons and corselets and chargers winding through stupendous
streets, and, somewhere in the midst, the majesty of England in the frail body of a little
old lady, who had had many children and one supreme misfortune. Moreover, he could
incidentally see Charlie. Moreover, he had been suffering from a series of his customary
colds, and from overwork, and Heve had told him that he ‘would do with a
change.’ Moreover, he had a project for buying paper in London: he had received,
from London, overtures which seemed promising. He had never been able to buy paper quite
as cheaply as Darius had bought paper, for the mere reason that he could not haggle over
sixteenths of a penny with efficient ruthlessness; he simply could not do it, being
somehow ashamed to do it. In Manchester, where Darius had bought paper for thirty years,
they were imperceptibly too brutal for Edwin in the harsh realities of a bargain; they had
no sense of shame. He thought that in letters from London he detected a softer spirit.</p>
<p>And above all he desired, by accepting Mr Orgreave’s invitation, to show to the
architect that the differences between them were really expunged from his mind. Among many
confusions in his father’s flourishing but disorderly affairs, Edwin had been
startled to find the Orgreave transactions. There were accounts and contra-accounts, and
quantities of strangely contradictory documents. Never had a real settlement occurred
between Darius and Osmond. And Osmond did not seem to want one. Edwin, however, with his
old-maid’s passion for putting and keeping everything in its place, insisted on one.
Mr Orgreave had to meet him on his strongest point, his love of order. The process of
settlement had been painful to Edwin; it had seriously marred some of his illusions.
Nearly the last of the entanglements in his father’s business, the Orgreave matter
was straightened and closed now; and the projected escapade to London would bury it deep,
might even restore agreeable illusions. And Edwin was incapable of nursing malice.</p>
<p>The best argument of all was that he had a right to go to London. He had earned London,
by honest and severe work, and by bearing firmly the huge weight of his responsibility. So
far he had offered himself no reward whatever, not even an increase of salary, not even a
week of freedom or the satisfaction of a single caprice.</p>
<p>“I shall go, and charge it to the business,” he said to himself. He became
excited about going.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Two.</h4>
<p>As he approached his house, he saw the elder Heve, vicar of Saint Peter’s, coming
away from it, a natty clerical figure in a straw hat of peculiar shape. Recently this man
had called once or twice; not professionally, for Darius was neither a churchman nor a
parishioner, but as a brother of Dr Heve’s, as a friendly human being, and Darius
had been flattered. The Vicar would talk about Jesus with quiet half-humorous enthusiasm.
For him at any rate Christianity was grand fun. He seemed never to be solemn over his
religion, like the Wesleyans. He never, with a shamed, defiant air, said, “I am not
ashamed of Christ,” like the Wesleyans. He might have known Christ slightly at
Cambridge. But his relations with Christ did not make him conceited, nor condescending.
And if he was concerned about the welfare of people who knew not Christ, he hid his
concern in the politest manner. Edwin, after being momentarily impressed by him, was now
convinced of his perfect mediocrity; the Vicar’s views on literature had damned him
eternally in the esteem of Edwin, who was still naïve enough to be unable to
comprehend how a man who had been to Cambridge could speak enthusiastically of
“Uncle Tom’s Cabin.” Moreover, Edwin despised him for his obvious pride
in being a bachelor. The Vicar would not say that a priest should be celibate, but he
would, with delicacy, imply as much. Then also, for Edwin’s taste, the parson was
somewhat too childishly interested in the culture of cellar-mushrooms, which was his
hobby. He would recount the tedious details of all his experiments to Darius, who,
flattered by these attentions from the Established Church, took immense delight in the
Vicar and in the sample mushrooms offered to him from time to time.</p>
<p>Maggie stood in the porch, which commanded the descent into Bursley; she was watching
the Vicar as he receded. When Edwin appeared at the gate, she gave a little jump, and he
fancied that she also blushed.</p>
<p>“Look here!” he exclaimed to himself, in a flash of suspicion.
“Surely she’s not thinking of the Vicar! Surely Maggie isn’t after
all!” He did not conceive it possible that the Vicar, who had been to Cambridge and
had notions about celibacy, was thinking of Maggie. “Women are queer,” he said
to himself. (For him, this generalisation from facts was quite original.) Fancy her
staring after the Vicar! She must have been doing it quite unconsciously! He had supposed
that her attitude towards the Vicar was precisely his own. He took it for granted that the
Vicar’s attitude was the same to both of them, based on a polite and kindly but firm
recognition that there could be no genuine sympathy between him and them.</p>
<p>“The Vicar’s just been,” said Maggie.</p>
<p>“Has he? ... Cheered the old man up at all?”</p>
<p>“Not much.” Maggie shook her head gloomily.</p>
<p>Edwin’s conscience seemed to be getting ready to hint that he ought not to go to
London.</p>
<p>“I say, Mag,” he said quietly, as he inserted his stick in the
umbrella-stand. She stopped on her way upstairs, and then approached him.</p>
<p>“Mr Orgreave wants me to go to London with him and Mrs Orgreave.” He
explained the whole project to her.</p>
<p>She said at once, eagerly and benevolently—</p>
<p>“Of course you ought to go. It’ll do you all the good in the world. I shall
be all right here. Clara and Albert will come for Jubilee Day, anyhow. But haven’t
you driven it late? ... The day after to-morrow, isn’t it? Mr Heve was only saying
just now that the hotels were all crammed.”</p>
<p>“Well, you know what Orgreave is! I expect he’ll look after all
that.”</p>
<p>“You go!” Maggie enjoined him.</p>
<p>“Won’t upset him?” Edwin nodded vaguely to wherever Darius might
be.</p>
<p>“Can’t be helped if it does,” she replied calmly.</p>
<p>“Well then, I’m dashed if I don’t go! What about my
collars?”</p>
<hr>
<h4>Three.</h4>
<p>Those three—Darius, Maggie, and Edwin—sat down to tea in silence. The
window was open, and the weather very warm and gay. During the previous twelve months they
had sat down to hundreds of such meals. Save for a few brief periods of cheerfulness,
Darius had steadily grown more taciturn, heavy and melancholy. In the winter he had of
course abandoned his attempts to divert himself by gardening—attempts at the best
half-hearted and feeble—and he had not resumed them in the spring. Less than half a
year previously he had often walked across the fields to Hillport and back, or up the
gradual slopes to the height of Toft End—he never went townwards, had not once
visited the Conservative Club. But now he could not even be persuaded to leave the garden.
An old wicker arm-chair had been placed at the end of the garden, and he would set out for
that arm-chair as upon a journey, and, having reached it, would sink into it with a huge
sigh, and repose before bracing himself to the effort of return.</p>
<p>And now it seemed marvellous that he had ever had the legs to get to Hillport and to
Toft End. He existed in a stupor of dull reflection, from pride pretending to read and not
reading, or pretending to listen and not listening, and occasionally making a remark which
was inapposite but which had to be humoured. And as the weeks passed his children’s
manner of humouring him became increasingly perfunctory, and their movements in putting
right the negligence of his attire increasingly brusque. Vainly they tried to remember in
time that he was a victim and not a criminal; they would remember after the careless
remark and after the curt gesture, when it was too late. His malady obsessed them: it was
in the air of the house, omnipresent; it weighed upon them, corroding the nerve and
exasperating the spirit. Now and then, when Darius had vented a burst of irrational anger,
they would say to each other with casual bitterness that really he was too annoying. Once,
when his demeanour towards the new servant had strongly suggested that he thought her name
was Bathsheba, Mrs Nixon herself had ‘flown out’ at him, and there had been a
scene which the doctor had soothed by discreet professional explanations. Maggie’s
difficulty was that he was always there, always on the spot. To be free of him she must
leave the house; and Maggie was not fond of leaving the house.</p>
<p>Edwin meant to inform him briefly of his intention to go to London, but such was the
power of habit that he hesitated; he could not bring himself to announce directly this
audacious and unprecedented act of freedom, though he knew that his father was as helpless
as a child in his hands. Instead, he began to talk about the renewal of the lease of the
premises in Duck Square, as to which it would be necessary to give notice to the landlord
at the end of the month.</p>
<p>“I’ve been thinking I’ll have it made out in my own name,” he
said. “It’ll save you signing, and so on.” This in itself was a proposal
sufficiently startling, and he would not have been surprised at a violent instinctive
protest from Darius; but Darius seemed not to heed.</p>
<p>Then both Edwin and Maggie noticed that he was trying to hold a sausage firm on his
plate with his knife, and to cut it with his fork.</p>
<p>“No, no, father!” said Maggie gently. “Not like that!”</p>
<p>He looked up, puzzled, and then bent himself again to the plate. The whole of his
faculties seemed to be absorbed in a great effort to resolve the complicated problem of
the plate, the sausage, the knife and the fork.</p>
<p>“You’ve got your knife in the wrong hand,” said Edwin impatiently, as
to a wilful child.</p>
<p>Darius stared at the knife and at the fork, and he then sighed, and his sigh meant,
“This business is beyond me!” Then he endeavoured to substitute the knife for
the fork, but he could not.</p>
<p>“See,” said Edwin, leaning over. “Like this!” He took the
knife, but Darius would not loose it. “No, leave go!” he ordered. “Leave
go! How can I show you if you don’t leave go?”</p>
<p>Darius dropped both knife and fork with a clatter. Edwin put the knife into his right
hand, and the fork into his left; but in a moment they were wrong again. At first Edwin
could not believe that his father was not indulging deliberately in naughtiness.</p>
<p>“Shall I cut it up for you, father?” Maggie asked, in a mild, persuasive
tone.</p>
<p>Darius pushed the plate towards her.</p>
<p>When she had cut up the sausage, she said—</p>
<p>“There you are! I’ll keep the knife. Then you can’t get mixed
up.”</p>
<p>And Darius ate the sausage with the fork alone. His intelligence had failed to master
the original problem presented to it. He ate steadily for a few moments, and then the
tears began to roll down his cheek, and he ate no more.</p>
<p>This incident, so simple, so unexpected, and so dramatic, caused the most acute
distress. And its effect was disconcerting in the highest degree. It reminded everybody
that what Darius suffered from was softening of the brain. For long he had been a prisoner
in the house and garden. For long he had been almost mute. And now, just after a visit
which usually acted upon him as a tonic, he had begun to lose the skill to feed himself.
Little by little he was demonstrating, by his slow declension from it, the wonder of the
standard of efficiency maintained by the normal human being.</p>
<p>Edwin and Maggie avoided one another, even in their glances. Each affected the
philosophical, seeking to diminish the significance of the episode. But neither succeeded.
Of the two years allotted to Darius, one had gone. What would the second be?</p>
<hr>
<h4>Four.</h4>
<p>In his bedroom, after tea, Edwin fought against the gloomy influence, but uselessly.
The inherent and appalling sadness of existence enveloped and chilled him. He gazed at the
rows of his books. He had done no regular reading of late. Why read? He gazed at the
screen in front of his bed, covered with neat memoranda. How futile! Why go to London? He
would only have to come back from London! And then he said resistingly, “I
<i>will</i> go to London.” But as he said it aloud, he knew well that he would not
go. His conscience would not allow him to depart. He could not leave Maggie alone with his
father. He yielded to his conscience unkindly, reluctantly, with no warm gust of
unselfishness; he yielded because he could not outrage his abstract sense of justice.</p>
<p>From the window he perceived Maggie and Janet Orgreave talking together over the low
separating wall. And he remembered a word of Janet’s to the effect that she and
Maggie were becoming quite friendly and that Maggie was splendid. Suddenly he went
downstairs into the garden. They were talking in attitudes of intimacy; and both were
grave and mature, and both had a little cleft under the chin. Their pale frocks harmonised
in the evening light. As he approached, Maggie burst into a girlish laugh. “Not
really?” she murmured, with the vivacity of a young girl. He knew not what they were
discussing, nor did he care. What interested him, what startled him, was the youthful
gesture and tone of Maggie. It pleased and touched him to discover another Maggie in the
Maggie of the household. Those two women had put on for a moment the charming, chattering
silliness of schoolgirls. He joined them. On the lawn of the Orgreaves, Alicia was
battling fiercely at tennis with an elegant young man whose name he did not know. Croquet
was deposed; tennis reigned.</p>
<p>Even Alicia’s occasional shrill cry had a mournful quality in the languishing
beauty of the evening.</p>
<p>“I wish you’d tell your father I shan’t be able to go
to-morrow,” Edwin said to Janet.</p>
<p>“But he’s told all of us you <i>are</i> going!” Janet exclaimed.</p>
<p>“Shan’t you go?” Maggie questioned, low.</p>
<p>“No,” he murmured. Glancing at Janet, he added, “It won’t do
for me to go.”</p>
<p>“What a pity!” Janet breathed.</p>
<p>Maggie did not say, “Oh! But you ought to! There’s no reason whatever why
you shouldn’t!” By her silence she contradicted the philosophic nonchalance of
her demeanour during the latter part of the meal.</p>
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