The Country House
PART II
CHAPTER IV
Mr. PENDYCE'S HEAD
Mr. Pendyce's head, seen from behind at his library bureau, where it
was his practice to spend most mornings from half-past nine to eleven or
even twelve, was observed to be of a shape to throw no small light upon
his class and character. Its contour was almost national. Bulging at the
back, and sloping rapidly to a thin and wiry neck, narrow between the ears
and across the brow, prominent in the jaw, the length of a line drawn from
the back headland to the promontory at the chin would have been extreme.
Upon the observer there was impressed the conviction that here was a skull
denoting, by surplusage of length, great precision of character and
disposition to action, and, by deficiency of breadth, a narrow tenacity
which might at times amount to wrong-headedness. The thin cantankerous
neck, on which little hairs grew low, and the intelligent ears, confirmed
this impression; and when his face, with its clipped hair, dry rosiness,
into which the east wind had driven a shade of yellow and the sun a shade
of brown, and grey, rather discontented eyes, came into view, the observer
had no longer any hesitation in saying that he was in the presence of an
Englishman, a landed proprietor, and, but for Mr. Pendyce's rooted
belief to the contrary, an individualist. His head, indeed, was like
nothing so much as the Admiralty Pier at Dover—that strange long
narrow thing, with a slight twist or bend at the end, which first disturbs
the comfort of foreigners arriving on these shores, and strikes them with
a sense of wonder and dismay.
He sat very motionless at his bureau, leaning a little over his papers
like a man to whom things do not come too easily; and every now and then
he stopped to refer to the calendar at his left hand, or to a paper in one
of the many pigeonholes. Open, and almost out of reach, was a back volume
of Punch, of which periodical, as a landed proprietor, he had an almost
professional knowledge. In leisure moments it was one of his chief
recreations to peruse lovingly those aged pictures, and at the image of
John Bull he never failed to think: 'Fancy making an Englishman out
a fat fellow like that!'
It was as though the artist had offered an insult to himself, passing him
over as the type, and conferring that distinction on someone fast going
out of fashion. The Rector, whenever he heard Mr. Pendyce say this,
strenuously opposed him, for he was himself of a square, stout build, and
getting stouter.
With all their aspirations to the character of typical Englishmen, Mr.
Pendyce and Mr. Barter thought themselves far from the old beef and beer,
port and pigskin types of the Georgian and early Victorian era. They were
men of the world, abreast of the times, who by virtue of a public school
and 'Varsity training had acquired a manner, a knowledge of men and
affairs, a standard of thought on which it had really never been needful
to improve. Both of them, but especially Mr. Pendyce, kept up with all
that was going forward by visiting the Metropolis six or seven or even
eight times a year. On these occasions they rarely took their wives,
having almost always important business in hand—old College, Church,
or Conservative dinners, cricket-matches, Church Congress, the Gaiety
Theatre, and for Mr. Barter the Lyceum. Both, too, belonged to clubs—the
Rector to a comfortable, old-fashioned place where he could get a rubber
without gambling, and Mr. Pendyce to the Temple of things as they had
been, as became a man who, having turned all social problems over in his
mind, had decided that there was no real safety but in the past.
They always went up to London grumbling, but this was necessary, and
indeed salutary, because of their wives; and they always came back
grumbling, because of their livers, which a good country rest always
fortunately reduced in time for the next visit. In this way they kept
themselves free from the taint of provincialism.
In the silence of his master's study the spaniel John, whose head,
too, was long and narrow, had placed it over his paw, as though suffering
from that silence, and when his master cleared his throat he guttered his
tail and turned up an eye with a little moon of white, without stirring
his chin.
The clock ticked at the end of the long, narrow room; the sunlight through
the long, narrow windows fell on the long, narrow backs of books in the
glassed book-case that took up the whole of one wall; and this room, with
its slightly leathery smell, seemed a fitting place for some long, narrow
ideal to be worked out to its long and narrow ending.
But Mr. Pendyce would have scouted the notion of an ending to ideals
having their basis in the hereditary principle.
“Let me do my duty and carry on the estate as my dear old father
did, and hand it down to my son enlarged if possible,” was sometimes
his saying, very, very often his thought, not seldom his prayer. “I
want to do no more than that.”
The times were bad and dangerous. There was every chance of a Radical
Government being returned, and the country going to the dogs. It was but
natural and human that he should pray for the survival of the form of
things which he believed in and knew, the form of things bequeathed to
him, and embodied in the salutary words “Horace Pendyce.” It
was not his habit to welcome new ideas. A new idea invading the country of
the Squire's mind was at once met with a rising of the whole
population, and either prevented from landing, or if already on shore
instantly taken prisoner. In course of time the unhappy creature, causing
its squeaks and groans to penetrate the prison walls, would be released
from sheer humaneness and love of a quiet life, and even allowed certain
privileges, remaining, however, “that poor, queer devil of a
foreigner.” One day, in an inattentive moment, the natives would
suffer it to marry, or find that in some disgraceful way it had caused the
birth of children unrecognised by law; and their respect for the
accomplished fact, for something that already lay in the past, would then
prevent their trying to unmarry it, or restoring the children to an unborn
state, and very gradually they would tolerate this intrusive brood. Such
was the process of Mr. Pendyce's mind. Indeed, like the spaniel
John, a dog of conservative instincts, at the approach of any strange
thing he placed himself in the way, barking and showing his teeth; and
sometimes truly he suffered at the thought that one day Horace Pendyce
would no longer be there to bark. But not often, for he had not much
imagination.
All the morning he had been working at that old vexed subject of Common
Rights on Worsted Scotton, which his father had fenced in and taught him
once for all to believe was part integral of Worsted Skeynes. The matter
was almost beyond doubt, for the cottagers—in a poor way at the time
of the fencing, owing to the price of bread—had looked on
apathetically till the very last year required by law to give the old
Squire squatter's rights, when all of a sudden that man, Peacock's
father, had made a gap in the fence and driven in beasts, which had
reopened the whole unfortunate question. This had been in '65, and
ever since there had been continual friction bordering on a law suit. Mr.
Pendyce never for a moment allowed it to escape his mind that the man
Peacock was at the bottom of it all; for it was his way to discredit all
principles as ground of action, and to refer everything to facts and
persons; except, indeed, when he acted himself, when he would somewhat
proudly admit that it was on principle. He never thought or spoke on an
abstract question; partly because his father had avoided them before him,
partly because he had been discouraged from doing so at school, but mainly
because he temperamentally took no interest in such unpractical things.
It was, therefore, a source of wonder to him that tenants of his own
should be ungrateful. He did his duty by them, as the Rector, in whose
keeping were their souls, would have been the first to affirm; the books
of his estate showed this, recording year by year an average gross profit
of some sixteen hundred pounds, and (deducting raw material incidental to
the upkeep of Worsted Skeynes) a net loss of three.
In less earthly matters, too, such as non-attendance at church, a
predisposition to poaching, or any inclination to moral laxity, he could
say with a clear conscience that the Rector was sure of his support. A
striking instance had occurred within the last month, when, discovering
that his under-keeper, an excellent man at his work, had got into a scrape
with the postman's wife, he had given the young fellow notice, and
cancelled the lease of his cottage.
He rose and went to the plan of the estate fastened to the wall, which he
unrolled by pulling a green silk cord, and stood there scrutinising it
carefully and placing his finger here and there. His spaniel rose too, and
settled himself unobtrusively on his master's foot. Mr. Pendyce
moved and trod on him. The spaniel yelped.
“D—n the dog! Oh, poor fellow, John!” said Mr. Pendyce.
He went back to his seat, but since he had identified the wrong spot he
was obliged in a minute to return again to the plan. The spaniel John,
cherishing the hope that he had been justly treated, approached in a half
circle, fluttering his tail; he had scarcely reached Mr. Pendyce's
foot when the door was opened, and the first footman brought in a letter
on a silver salver.
Mr. Pendyce took the note, read it, turned to his bureau, and said:
“No answer.”
He sat staring at this document in the silent room, and over his face in
turn passed anger, alarm, distrust, bewilderment. He had not the power of
making very clear his thought, except by speaking aloud, and he muttered
to himself. The spaniel John, who still nurtured a belief that he had
sinned, came and lay down very close against his leg.
Mr. Pendyce, never having reflected profoundly on the working morality of
his times, had the less difficulty in accepting it. Of violating it he had
practically no opportunity, and this rendered his position stronger. It
was from habit and tradition rather than from principle and conviction
that he was a man of good moral character.
And as he sat reading this note over and over, he suffered from a sense of
nausea.
It was couched in these terms:
“THE FIRS,
“May 20.
“DEAR SIR,
“You may or may not have heard that I have made your son, Mr. George
Pendyce, correspondent in a divorce suit against my wife. Neither for your
sake nor your son's, but for the sake of Mrs. Pendyce, who is the
only woman in these parts that I respect, I will withdraw the suit if your
son will give his word not to see my wife again.
“Please send me an early answer.
“I am,
“Your obedient servant,
“JASPAR BELLEW.”
The acceptance of tradition (and to accept it was suitable to the Squire's
temperament) is occasionally marred by the impingement of tradition on
private life and comfort. It was legendary in his class that young men's
peccadilloes must be accepted with a certain indulgence. They would, he
said, be young men. They must, he would remark, sow their wild oats. Such
was his theory. The only difficulty he now had was in applying it to his
own particular case, a difficulty felt by others in times past, and to be
felt again in times to come. But, since he was not a philosopher, he did
not perceive the inconsistency between his theory and his dismay. He saw
his universe reeling before that note, and he was not a man to suffer
tamely; he felt that others ought to suffer too. It was monstrous that a
fellow like this Bellew, a loose fish, a drunkard, a man who had nearly
run over him, should have it in his power to trouble the serenity of
Worsted Skeynes. It was like his impudence to bring such a charge against
his son. It was like his d——d impudence! And going abruptly to
the bell, he trod on his spaniel's ear.
“D—n the dog! Oh, poor fellow, John!” But the spaniel
John, convinced at last that he had sinned, hid himself in a far corner
whence he could see nothing, and pressed his chin closely to the ground.
“Ask your mistress to come here.”
Standing by the hearth, waiting for his wife, the Squire displayed to
greater advantage than ever the shape of his long and narrow head; his
neck had grown conspicuously redder; his eyes, like those of an offended
swan, stabbed, as it were, at everything they saw.
It was not seldom that Mrs. Pendyce was summoned to the study to hear him
say: “I want to ask your advice. So-and-so has done such and
such.... I have made up my mind.”
She came, therefore, in a few minutes. In compliance with his “Look
at that, Margery,” she read the note, and gazed at him with distress
in her eyes, and he looked back at her with wrath in his. For this was
tragedy.
Not to everyone is it given to take a wide view of things—to look
over the far, pale streams, the purple heather, and moonlit pools of the
wild marches, where reeds stand black against the sundown, and from long
distance comes the cry of a curlew—nor to everyone to gaze from
steep cliffs over the wine-dark, shadowy sea—or from high
mountainsides to see crowned chaos, smoking with mist, or gold-bright in
the sun.
To most it is given to watch assiduously a row of houses, a back-yard, or,
like Mrs. and Mr. Pendyce, the green fields, trim coverts, and Scotch
garden of Worsted Skeynes. And on that horizon the citation of their
eldest son to appear in the Divorce Court loomed like a cloud, heavy with
destruction.
So far as such an event could be realised imagination at Worsted Skeynes
was not too vivid—it spelled ruin to an harmonious edifice of ideas
and prejudice and aspiration. It would be no use to say of that event,
“What does it matter? Let people think what they like, talk as they
like.” At Worsted Skeynes (and Worsted Skeynes was every country
house) there was but one set of people, one church, one pack of hounds,
one everything. The importance of a clear escutcheon was too great. And
they who had lived together for thirty-four years looked at each other
with a new expression in their eyes; their feelings were for once the
same. But since it is always the man who has the nicer sense of honour,
their thoughts were not the same, for Mr. Pendyce was thinking: 'I
won't believe it—disgracing us all!' and Mrs. Pendyce
was thinking: 'My boy!'
It was she who spoke first.
“Oh, Horace!”
The sound of her voice restored the Squire's fortitude.
“There you go, Margery! D'you mean to say you believe what
this fellow says? He ought to be horsewhipped. He knows my opinion of him.
“It's a piece of his confounded impudence! He nearly ran over
me, and now——”
Mrs. Pendyce broke in:
“But, Horace, I'm afraid it's true! Ellen Malden——”
“Ellen Malden?” said Mr. Pendyce. “What business has she——”
He was silent, staring gloomily at the plan of Worsted Skeynes, still
unrolled, like an emblem of all there was at stake. “If George has
really,” he burst out, “he's a greater fool than I took
him for! A fool? He's a knave!”
Again he was silent.
Mrs. Pendyce flushed at that word, and bit her lips.
“George could never be a knave!” she said.
Mr. Pendyce answered heavily:
“Disgracing his name!”
Mrs. Pendyce bit deeper into her lips.
“Whatever he has done,” she said, “George is sure to
have behaved like a gentleman!”
An angry smile twisted the Squire's mouth.
“Just like a woman!” he said.
But the smile died away, and on both their faces came a helpless look.
Like people who have lived together without real sympathy—though,
indeed, they had long ceased to be conscious of that—now that
something had occurred in which their interests were actually at one, they
were filled with a sort of surprise. It was no good to differ. Differing,
even silent differing, would not help their son.
“I shall write to George,” said Mr. Pendyce at last. “I
shall believe nothing till I've heard from him. He'll tell us
the truth, I suppose.”
There was a quaver in his voice.
Mrs. Pendyce answered quickly:
“Oh, Horace, be careful what you say! I'm sure he is
suffering!”
Her gentle soul, disposed to pleasure, was suffering, too, and the tears
stole up in her eyes. Mr. Pendyce's sight was too long to see them.
The infirmity had been growing on him ever since his marriage.
“I shall say what I think right,” he said. “I shall take
time to consider what I shall say; I won't be hurried by this
ruffian.”
Mrs. Pendyce wiped her lips with her lace-edged handkerchief.
“I hope you will show me the letter,” she said.
The Squire looked at her, and he realised that she was trembling and very
white, and, though this irritated him, he answered almost kindly:
“It's not a matter for you, my dear.”
Mrs. Pendyce took a step towards him; her gentle face expressed a strange
determination.
“He is my son, Horace, as well as yours.”
Mr. Pendyce turned round uneasily.
“It's no use your getting nervous, Margery. I shall do what's
best. You women lose your heads. That d——d fellow's
lying! If he isn't——”
At these words the spaniel John rose from his corner and advanced to the
middle of the floor. He stood there curved in a half-circle, and looked
darkly at his master.
“Confound it!” said Mr. Pendyce. “It's—it's
damnable!”
And as if answering for all that depended on Worsted Skeynes, the spaniel
John deeply wagged that which had been left him of his tail.
Mrs. Pendyce came nearer still.
“If George refuses to give you that promise, what will you do,
Horace?”
Mr. Pendyce stared.
“Promise? What promise?”
Mrs. Pendyce thrust forward the note.
“This promise not to see her again.”
Mr. Pendyce motioned it aside.
“I'll not be dictated to by that fellow Bellew,” he
said. Then, by an afterthought: “It won't do to give him a
chance. George must promise me that in any case.”
Mrs. Pendyce pressed her lips together.
“But do you think he will?”
“Think—think who will? Think he will what? Why can't you
express yourself, Margery? If George has really got us into this mess he
must get us out again.”
Mrs. Pendyce flushed.
“He would never leave her in the lurch!”
The Squire said angrily:
“Lurch! Who said anything about lurch? He owes it to her. Not that
she deserves any consideration, if she's been—— You don't
mean to say you think he'll refuse? He'd never be such a
donkey?”
Mrs. Pendyce raised her hands and made what for her was a passionate
gesture.
“Oh, Horace!” she said, “you don't understand. He's
in love with her!”
Mr. Pendyce's lower lip trembled, a sign with him of excitement or
emotion. All the conservative strength of his nature, all the immense dumb
force of belief in established things, all that stubborn hatred and dread
of change, that incalculable power of imagining nothing, which, since the
beginning of time, had made Horace Pendyce the arbiter of his land, rose
up within his sorely tried soul.
“What on earth's that to do with it?” he cried in a
rage. “You women! You've no sense of anything! Romantic,
idiotic, immoral— I don't know what you're at. For God's
sake don't go putting ideas into his head!”
At this outburst Mrs. Pendyce's face became rigid; only the flicker
of her eyelids betrayed how her nerves were quivering. Suddenly she threw
her hands up to her ears.
“Horace!” she cried, “do—— Oh, poor John!”
The Squire had stepped hastily and heavily on to his dog's paw. The
creature gave a grievous howl. Mr. Pendyce went down on his knees and
raised the limb.
“Damn the dog!” he stuttered. “Oh, poor fellow, John!”
And the two long and narrow heads for a moment were close together.