<SPAN name="vol_3_chap_17"></SPAN>
<h3>Volume Three--Chapter Seventeen.</h3>
<h4>The Chain Broken.</h4>
<p>Shortly after eight o’clock Edwin was walking down Trafalgar Road on his way to
the shop. He had bathed, and drunk some tea, and under the stimulation he felt the
factitious vivacity of excessive fatigue. Rain had fallen quietly and perseveringly during
the night, and though the weather was now fine the streets were thick with black mire.
Paintresses with their neat gloves and their dinner-baskets and their thin shoes were
trudging to work, and young clerks and shop-assistants and the upper classes of labour
generally. Everybody was in a hurry. The humbler mass had gone long ago. Miners had been
in the earth for hours. Later, and more leisurely, the magnates would pass by.</p>
<p>There were carriages about. An elegant wagonette, streaming with red favours, dashed
down the road behind two horses. Its cargo was a handful of clay-soiled artisans, gleeful
in the naïve pride of their situation, wearing red and shouting red, and hurrahing
for the Conservative candidate.</p>
<p>“Asses!” murmured Edwin, with acrid and savage disdain. “Do you think
he’d drive you anywhere to-morrow?” He walked on a little, and broke forth
again, all to himself: “Of course he’s doing it solely in your interest,
isn’t he? Why doesn’t he pick some of these paintresses out of the mud and
give them a drive?”</p>
<p>He cultivated an unreasoning anger against the men who had so impressed him at the
banquet. He did not try to find answers to their arguments. He accused them stoutly of
wilful blindness, of cowardice, of bullying, of Pharisaism, and of other sins. He had no
wish to hear their defence. He condemned them, and as it were ordered them to be taken
away and executed. He had a profound conviction that argument was futile, and that nothing
would serve but a pitched battle, in which each fighting man should go to the poll and put
a cross against a name in grim silence. Argue with these gross self-satisfied fellows
about the turpitude of the artisans! Why, there was scarcely one of them whose grandfather
had not been an artisan! Curse their patriotism! Then he would begin bits of argument to
himself, and stop them, too impatient to continue... The shilling cigars of those feasters
disgusted him... In such wise his mind ran. And he was not much kinder to the artisan. If
scorn could have annihilated, there would have been no proletariat left in the division...
Men? Sheep rather! Letting themselves be driven up and down like that, and believing all
the yarns that were spun to them! Gaping idiots, they would swallow any mortal thing!
There was simply naught that they were not stupid enough to swallow with a glass of beer.
It would serve them right if — However, that could not happen. Idiocy had limits. At
least he presumed it had.</p>
<p>Early as it was, the number of carriages was already considerable. But he did not see
one with the blue of the Labour candidate. Blue rosettes there were, but the red rosettes
bore them down easily. Even dogs had been adorned with red rosettes, and nice clean
infants! And on all the hoardings were enormous red posters exhorting the shrewd
common-sense potter not to be misled by paid agitators, but to plump for his true friend,
for the man who was anxious to devote his entire career and goods to the welfare of the
potter and the integrity of the Empire.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Two.</h4>
<p>“If you can give me three days off, sir,” said Big James, in the majestic
humility of his apron, “I shall take it kindly.”</p>
<p>Edwin had gone into the composing room with the copy for a demy poster, consisting of
four red words to inform the public that the true friend of the public was ‘romping
in.’ A hundred posters were required within an hour. He had nearly refused the
order, in his feverish fatigue and his disgust, but some remnant of sagacity had asserted
itself in him and saved him from this fatuity.</p>
<p>“Why?” he asked roughly. “What’s up now, James?”</p>
<p>“My old comrade Abraham Harracles is dead, sir, at Glasgow, and I’m wishful
for to attend the interment, far as it is. He was living with his daughter, and
she’s written to me. If you could make it convenient to spare me—”</p>
<p>“Of course, of course!” Edwin interrupted him hastily. In his present mood,
it revolted him that a man of between fifty and sixty should be humbly asking as a favour
to be allowed to fulfil a pious duty.</p>
<p>“I’m very much obliged to you, sir,” said Big James simply, quite
unaware that captious Edwin found his gratitude excessive and servile. “I’m
the last now, sir, of the old glee-party,” he added.</p>
<p>“Really!”</p>
<p>Big James nodded, and said quietly, “And how’s the old gentleman,
sir?”</p>
<p>Edwin shook his head.</p>
<p>“I’m sorry, sir,” said Big James.</p>
<p>“I’ve been up with him all night,” Edwin told him.</p>
<p>“I wonder if you’d mind dropping me a line to Glasgow, sir, if anything
happens. I can give you the address. If it isn’t—”</p>
<p>“Certainly, if you like.” He tried to be nonchalant “When are you
going?”</p>
<p>“I did think of getting to Crewe before noon, sir. As soon as I’ve seen to
this—” He cocked his eye at the copy for the poster.</p>
<p>“Oh, you needn’t bother about that,” said Edwin carelessly. “Go
now if you want to.”</p>
<p>“I’ve got time, sir. Mr Curtenty’s coming for me at nine
o’clock to drive me to th’ polling-booth.”</p>
<p>This was the first time that Edwin had ever heard Big James talk of his private
politics. The fact was that Big James was no more anxious than Jos Curtenty and Osmond
Orgreave to put himself under the iron heel of his fellow working-man.</p>
<p>“And what’s <i>your</i> colour, James?” His smile was half a
sneer.</p>
<p>“If you’ll pardon me saying so, sir, I’m for Her Most
Gracious,” Big James answered with grave dignity.</p>
<p>Three journeymen, pretending to be busy, were listening with all ears from the other
side of a case.</p>
<p>“Oh!” exclaimed Edwin, dashed. “Well, that’s all
right!”</p>
<p>He walked straight out, put on his hat, and went to the Bleakridge polling-station and
voted Labour defiantly, as though with a personal grievance against the polling-clerk. He
had a vote, not as lessee of the business premises, but as his father’s lodger. He
despised Labour; he did not care what happened to Labour. In voting for Labour, he seemed
to have the same satisfaction as if from pique he had voted against it because its
stupidity had incensed him.</p>
<p>Then, instead of returning him to the shop, his legs took him home and upstairs, and he
lay down in his own room.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Three.</h4>
<p>He was awakened by the presence of some one at his bedside, and the whole of his body
protested against the disturbance.</p>
<p>“I couldn’t make you hear with knocking,” said Dr Heve, “so I
came into the room.”</p>
<p>“Hello, doctor, is that you?” Edwin sat up, dazed, and with a sensation of
large waves passing in slow succession through his head. “I must have dropped
asleep.”</p>
<p>“I hear you had a pretty bad night with him,” the doctor remarked.</p>
<p>“Yes. It’s a mystery to me how he could keep it up.”</p>
<p>“I was afraid you would. Well, he’s quieter now. In fact, he’s
unconscious.”</p>
<p>“Unconscious, is he?”</p>
<p>“You’ll have no more trouble with the old gentleman,” said the
doctor. He was looking at the window, as though at some object of great interest to be
seen thence. His tone was gentle and unaffected. For the twentieth time Edwin privately
admitted that in spite of the weak, vacuous smile which seemed to delight everybody except
himself, there was a sympathetic quality in this bland doctor. In common moments he was
common, but in the rare moment when a man with such a smile ought to be at his worst, a
certain soft dignity would curiously distinguish his bearing.</p>
<p>“Um!” Edwin muttered, also looking at the window. And then, after a pause,
he asked: “Will it last long?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” said the doctor. “The fact is, this is the
first case of Cheyne-Stokes breathing I’ve ever had. It may last for
days.”</p>
<p>“How’s the nurse?” Edwin demanded.</p>
<p>They talked about the nurse, and then Dr Heve said that, his brother the Vicar and he
having met in the street, they had come in together, as the Vicar was anxious to have news
of his old acquaintance’s condition. It appeared that the Vicar was talking to
Maggie and Janet in the drawing-room.</p>
<p>“Well,” said Edwin, “I shan’t come down. Tell him I’m
only presentable enough for doctors.”</p>
<p>With a faint smile and a nod, the doctor departed. As soon as he had gone, Edwin jumped
off the bed and looked at his watch, which showed two o’clock. No doubt dinner was
over. No doubt Maggie had decided that it would be best to leave him alone to sleep. But
that day neither he nor anybody in the household had the sense of time, the continuous
consciousness of what the hour was. The whole systematised convention of existence was
deranged, and all values transmuted. Edwin was aware of no feeling whatever except an
intensity of curiosity to see again in tranquillity the being with whom he had passed the
night. Pushing his hand through his hair, he hurried into the sick-room. It was all tidy
and fresh, as though nothing had ever happened in it. Mrs Nixon, shrivelled and deaf, sat
in the arm-chair, watching. No responsibility now attached to the vigil, and so it could
be left to the aged and almost useless domestic. She gave a gesture which might have meant
anything—despair, authority, pride, grief.</p>
<p>Edwin stood by the bedside and gazed. Darius lay on his back, with eyes half-open,
motionless, unseeing, unhearing, and he breathed faintly, with the soft regularity of an
infant. The struggle was finished, and he had emerged from it with the right to breathe.
His hair had been brushed, and his beard combed. It was uncanny, this tidiness, this calm,
this passivity. The memory of the night grew fantastic and remote. Surely the old man must
spring up frantically in a moment, to beat off his enemy! Surely his agonised cry for
Clara must be ringing through the room! But nothing of him stirred. Air came and went
through those parted and relaxed lips with the perfect efficiency of a healthy natural
function. And yet he was not asleep. His obstinate and tremendous spirit was now withdrawn
somewhere, into some fastness more recondite than sleep; not far off; not detached, not
dethroned; but undiscoverably hidden, and beyond any summons. Edwin gazed and gazed, until
his heart could hold no more of the emotion which this mysteriously impressive spectacle,
at once majestic and poignant, distilled into it. Then he silently left the old woman
sitting dully by the spirit concealed in its ruined home.</p>
<hr>
<h4>Four.</h4>
<p>In the evening he was resting on the sofa in the drawing-room. Auntie Hamps was near
him, at work on some embroidery. In order that her dear Edwin might doze a little if he
could, she refrained from speech; from time to time she stopped her needle and looked
reflectively at the morsel of fire, or at the gas. She had been in the house since before
tea. Clara also had passed most of the day there, with a few intervals at her own home;
but now Clara was gone, and Janet too had gone. Darius was tiring them all out, in his
mild and senseless repose. He remained absolutely still, and the enigma which he so
indifferently offered to them might apparently continue for ever; at any rate the
doctor’s statement that he might keep as he was for days and days, beyond help, hung
over the entire household, discouraging and oppressive. The energy of even Auntie Hamps
was baffled. Only Alicia, who had come in, as she said, to take Janet’s place,
insisted on being occupied. This was one of the nights dedicated by family arrangement to
her betrothed, but Alicia had found pleasure in sacrificing herself, and him, to her very
busy sense of duty.</p>
<p>Suddenly the drawing-room door was pushed open, without a sound, and Alicia, in all the
bursting charm of her youthfulness and the delicious <i>naïveté</i> of her
self-importance, stood in the doorway. She made no gesture; she just looked at Edwin with
a peculiar ominous and excited glance, and Edwin rose quickly and left the room. Auntie
Hamps had noticed nothing.</p>
<p>“Maggie wants you upstairs,” said Alicia to Edwin.</p>
<p>He made no answer. He did not ask where Maggie was. They went upstairs together. But at
the door of the sick-room Alicia hung back, intimidated, and Edwin entered and shut the
door on that beautiful image of proud, throbbing life.</p>
<p>Maggie, standing by the bed under the gas which blazed at full, turned to him as he
approached.</p>
<p>“Just come and look at him,” she said quietly.</p>
<p>Darius lay in exactly the same position; except that his mouth was open a little wider,
he presented exactly the same appearance as in the afternoon. His weary features, pitiful
and yet grim, had exactly the same expression. But there was no sign of breathing. Edwin
bent and listened.</p>
<p>“Oh! He’s dead!” he murmured.</p>
<p>Maggie nodded, her eyes glittering as though set with diamonds. “I think
so,” she said.</p>
<p>“When was it?”</p>
<p>“Scarcely a minute ago. I was sitting there, by the fire, and I thought I noticed
something—”</p>
<p>“What did you notice?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know... I must go and tell nurse.”</p>
<p>She went, wiping her eyes.</p>
<p>Edwin, now alone, looked again at the residue of his father. The spirit, after hiding
within so long, had departed and left no trace. It had done with that form and was away.
The vast and forlorn adventure of the little boy from the Bastille was over. Edwin did not
know that the little boy from the Bastille was dead. He only knew that his father was
dead. It seemed intolerably tragic that the enfeebled wreck should have had to bear so
much, and yet intolerably tragic also that death should have relieved him. But
Edwin’s distress was shot through and enlightened by his solemn satisfaction at the
fact that destiny had allotted to him, Edwin, an experience of such profound and
overwhelming grandeur. His father was, and lo! he was not. That was all, but it was
ineffable.</p>
<p>Maggie returned to the room, followed by Nurse Shaw, whose head was enveloped in
various bandages. Edwin began to anticipate all the tedious formalities, as to which he
would have to inform himself, of registration and interment...</p>
<hr>
<h4>Five.</h4>
<p>Ten o’clock. The news was abroad in the house. Alicia had gone to spread it.
Maggie had startled everybody by deciding to go down and tell Clara herself, though Albert
was bound to call. The nurse had laid out the corpse. Auntie Hamps and Edwin were again in
the drawing-room together; the ageing lady was making up her mind to go. Edwin, in search
of an occupation, prepared to write letters to one or two distant relatives of his mother.
Then he remembered his promise to Big James, and decided to write that letter first.</p>
<p>“What a mercy he passed away peacefully!” Auntie Hamps exclaimed, not for
the first time.</p>
<p>Edwin, at a rickety fancy desk, began to write: “Dear James, my father passed
peacefully away at—” Then, with an abrupt movement, he tore the sheet in two
and threw it in the fire, and began again: “Dear James, my father died quietly at
eight o’clock to-night.”</p>
<p>Soon afterwards, when Mrs Hamps had departed with her genuine but too spectacular
grief, Edwin heard an immense commotion coming down the road from Hanbridge: cheers,
shouts, squeals, penny whistles, and trumpets. He opened the gate.</p>
<p>“Who’s in?” he asked a stout, shabby man, who was gesticulating in
glee with a little Tory flag on the edge of the crowd.</p>
<p>“Who do <i>you</i> think, mister?” replied the man drunkenly.</p>
<p>“What majority?”</p>
<p>“Four hundred and thirty-nine.”</p>
<p>The integrity of the empire was assured, and the paid agitator had received a proper
rebuff.</p>
<p>“Miserable idiots!” Edwin murmured, with the most extraordinary violence of
scorn, as he re-entered the house, and the blare of triumph receded. He was very much
surprised. He had firmly expected his own side to win, though he was reconciled to a
considerable reduction of the old majority. His lips curled.</p>
<p>It was in his resentment, in the hard setting of his teeth as he confirmed himself in
the rightness of his own opinions, that he first began to realise an individual freedom.
“I don’t care if we’re beaten forty times,” his thoughts ran.
“I’ll be a more out-and-out Radical than ever! I don’t care, and I
don’t care!” And he felt sturdily that he was free. The chain was at last
broken that had bound together those two beings so dissimilar, antagonistic, and
ill-matched—Edwin Clayhanger and his father.</p>
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