CHAPTER I
SISTERS
URSULA AND GUDRUN Brangwen sat one morning in the window-bay of their
father's house in Beldover, working and talking. Ursula was stitching a piece
of brightly-coloured embroidery, and Gudrun was drawing upon a board which she
held on her knee. They were mostly silent, talking as their thoughts strayed
through their minds.
`Ursula,' said Gudrun, `don't you really want to get married?' Ursula
laid her embroidery in her lap and looked up. Her face was calm and
considerate.
`I don't know,' she replied. `It depends how you mean.'
Gudrun was slightly taken aback. She watched her sister for some moments.
`Well,' she said, ironically, `it usually means one thing! But don't you
think anyhow, you'd be ' she darkened slightly `in a better position than
you are in now.'
A shadow came over Ursula's face.
`I might,' she said. `But I'm not sure.'
Again Gudrun paused, slightly irritated. She wanted to be quite definite.
`You don't think one needs the experience of having been married?' she
asked.
`Do you think it need be an experience?' replied Ursula.
`Bound to be, in some way or other,' said Gudrun, coolly. `Possibly
undesirable, but bound to be an experience of some sort.'
`Not really,' said Ursula. `More likely to be the end of experience.'
Gudrun sat very still, to attend to this.
`Of course,' she said, `there's that to consider.' This brought the
conversation to a close. Gudrun, almost angrily, took up her rubber and began
to rub out part of her drawing. Ursula stitched absorbedly.
`You wouldn't consider a good offer?' asked Gudrun.
`I think I've rejected several,' said Ursula.
`Really!' Gudrun flushed dark `But anything really worth while?
Have you really?'
`A thousand a year, and an awfully nice man. I liked him awfully,' said
Ursula.
`Really! But weren't you fearfully tempted?'
`In the abstract but not in the concrete,' said Ursula. `When it comes to
the point, one isn't even tempted oh, if I were tempted, I'd marry like a
shot. I'm only tempted not to.' The faces of both sisters suddenly lit up
with amusement.
`Isn't it an amazing thing,' cried Gudrun, `how strong the temptation is, not
to!' They both laughed, looking at each other. In their hearts they were
frightened.
There was a long pause, whilst Ursula stitched and Gudrun went on with her
sketch. The sisters were women, Ursula twenty-six, and Gudrun twenty-five. But
both had the remote, virgin look of modern girls, sisters of Artemis rather than
of Hebe. Gudrun was very beautiful, passive, soft-skinned, soft-limbed. She wore
a dress of dark-blue silky stuff, with ruches of blue and green linen lace in
the neck and sleeves; and she had emerald-green stockings. Her look of
confidence and diffidence contrasted with Ursula's sensitive expectancy. The
provincial people, intimidated by Gudrun's perfect sang-froid and exclusive
bareness of manner, said of her: `She is a smart woman.' She had just come back
from London, where she had spent several years, working at an art-school, as a
student, and living a studio life.
`I was hoping now for a man to come along,' Gudrun said, suddenly catching
her underlip between her teeth, and making a strange grimace, half sly smiling,
half anguish. Ursula was afraid.
`So you have come home, expecting him here?' she laughed.
`Oh my dear,' cried Gudrun, strident, `I wouldn't go out of my way to look
for him. But if there did happen to come along a highly attractive individual of
sufficient means well ' she tailed off ironically. Then she looked
searchingly at Ursula, as if to probe her. `Don't you find yourself getting
bored?' she asked of her sister. `Don't you find, that things fail to
materialise? Nothing materialises! Everything withers in the bud.'
`What withers in the bud?' asked Ursula.
`Oh, everything oneself things in general.' There was a pause, whilst
each sister vaguely considered her fate.
`It does frighten one,' said Ursula, and again there was a pause. `But do you
hope to get anywhere by just marrying?'
`It seems to be the inevitable next step,' said Gudrun. Ursula pondered this,
with a little bitterness. She was a class mistress herself, in Willey Green
Grammar School, as she had been for some years.
`I know,' she said, `it seems like that when one thinks in the abstract. But
really imagine it: imagine any man one knows, imagine him coming home to one
every evening, and saying "Hello," and giving one a kiss '
There was a blank pause.
`Yes,' said Gudrun, in a narrowed voice. `It's just impossible. The man makes
it impossible.'
`Of course there's children ' said Ursula doubtfully.
Gudrun's face hardened.
`Do you really want children, Ursula?' she asked coldly. A dazzled,
baffled look came on Ursula's face.
`One feels it is still beyond one,' she said.
`Do you feel like that?' asked Gudrun. `I get no feeling whatever from
the thought of bearing children.'
Gudrun looked at Ursula with a masklike, expressionless face. Ursula knitted
her brows.
`Perhaps it isn't genuine,' she faltered. `Perhaps one doesn't really want
them, in one's soul only superficially.' A hardness came over Gudrun's face.
She did not want to be too definite.
`When one thinks of other people's children ' said Ursula.
Again Gudrun looked at her sister, almost hostile.
`Exactly,' she said, to close the conversation.
The two sisters worked on in silence, Ursula having always that strange
brightness of an essential flame that is caught, meshed, contravened. She lived
a good deal by herself, to herself, working, passing on from day to day, and
always thinking, trying to lay hold on life, to grasp it in her own
understanding. Her active living was suspended, but underneath, in the darkness,
something was coming to pass. If only she could break through the last
integuments! She seemed to try and put her hands out, like an infant in the
womb, and she could not, not yet. Still she had a strange prescience, an
intimation of something yet to come.
She laid down her work and looked at her sister. She thought Gudrun so
charming, so infinitely charming, in her softness and her fine, exquisite
richness of texture and delicacy of line. There was a certain playfulness about
her too, such a piquancy or ironic suggestion, such an untouched reserve. Ursula
admired her with all her soul.
`Why did you come home, Prune?' she asked.
Gudrun knew she was being admired. She sat back from her drawing and looked
at Ursula, from under her finely-curved lashes.
`Why did I come back, Ursula?' she repeated. `I have asked myself a thousand
times.'
`And don't you know?'
`Yes, I think I do. I think my coming back home was just reculer pour
mieux sauter.'
And she looked with a long, slow look of knowledge at Ursula.
`I know!' cried Ursula, looking slightly dazzled and falsified, and as if she
did not know. `But where can one jump to?'
`Oh, it doesn't matter,' said Gudrun, somewhat superbly. `If one jumps over
the edge, one is bound to land somewhere.'
`But isn't it very risky?' asked Ursula.
A slow mocking smile dawned on Gudrun's face.
`Ah!' she said laughing. `What is it all but words!' And so again she closed
the conversation. But Ursula was still brooding.
`And how do you find home, now you have come back to it?' she asked.
Gudrun paused for some moments, coldly, before answering. Then, in a cold
truthful voice, she said:
`I find myself completely out of it.'
`And father?'
Gudrun looked at Ursula, almost with resentment, as if brought to bay.
`I haven't thought about him: I've refrained,' she said coldly.
`Yes,' wavered Ursula; and the conversation was really at an end. The sisters
found themselves confronted by a void, a terrifying chasm, as if they had looked
over the edge.
They worked on in silence for some time, Gudrun's cheek was flushed with
repressed emotion. She resented its having been called into being.
`Shall we go out and look at that wedding?' she asked at length, in a voice
that was too casual.
`Yes!' cried Ursula, too eagerly, throwing aside her sewing and leaping up,
as if to escape something, thus betraying the tension of the situation and
causing a friction of dislike to go over Gudrun's nerves.
As she went upstairs, Ursula was aware of the house, of her home round about
her. And she loathed it, the sordid, too-familiar place! She was afraid at the
depth of her feeling against the home, the milieu, the whole atmosphere and
condition of this obsolete life. Her feeling frightened her.
The two girls were soon walking swiftly down the main road of Beldover, a
wide street, part shops, part dwelling-houses, utterly formless and sordid,
without poverty. Gudrun, new from her life in Chelsea and Sussex, shrank cruelly
from this amorphous ugliness of a small colliery town in the Midlands. Yet
forward she went, through the whole sordid gamut of pettiness, the long
amorphous, gritty street. She was exposed to every stare, she passed on through
a stretch of torment. It was strange that she should have chosen to come back
and test the full effect of this shapeless, barren ugliness upon herself. Why
had she wanted to submit herself to it, did she still want to submit herself to
it, the insufferable torture of these ugly, meaningless people, this defaced
countryside? She felt like a beetle toiling in the dust. She was filled with
repulsion.
They turned off the main road, past a black patch of common-garden, where
sooty cabbage stumps stood shameless. No one thought to be ashamed. No one was
ashamed of it all.
`It is like a country in an underworld,' said Gudrun. `The colliers bring it
above-ground with them, shovel it up. Ursula, it's marvellous, it's really
marvellous it's really wonderful, another world. The people are all ghouls,
and everything is ghostly. Everything is a ghoulish replica of the real world, a
replica, a ghoul, all soiled, everything sordid. It's like being mad, Ursula.'
The sisters were crossing a black path through a dark, soiled field. On the
left was a large landscape, a valley with collieries, and opposite hills with
cornfields and woods, all blackened with distance, as if seen through a veil of
crape. White and black smoke rose up in steady columns, magic within the dark
air. Near at hand came the long rows of dwellings, approaching curved up the
hill-slope, in straight lines along the brow of the hill. They were of darkened
red brick, brittle, with dark slate roofs. The path on which the sisters walked
was black, trodden-in by the feet of the recurrent colliers, and bounded from
the field by iron fences; the stile that led again into the road was rubbed
shiny by the moleskins of the passing miners. Now the two girls were going
between some rows of dwellings, of the poorer sort. Women, their arms folded
over their coarse aprons, standing gossiping at the end of their block, stared
after the Brangwen sisters with that long, unwearying stare of aborigines;
children called out names.
Gudrun went on her way half dazed. If this were human life, if these were
human beings, living in a complete world, then what was her own world, outside?
She was aware of her grass-green stockings, her large grass-green velour hat,
her full soft coat, of a strong blue colour. And she felt as if she were
treading in the air, quite unstable, her heart was contracted, as if at any
minute she might be precipitated to the ground. She was afraid.
She clung to Ursula, who, through long usage was inured to this violation of
a dark, uncreated, hostile world. But all the time her heart was crying, as if
in the midst of some ordeal: `I want to go back, I want to go away, I want not
to know it, not to know that this exists.' Yet she must go forward.
Ursula could feel her suffering.
`You hate this, don't you?' she asked.
`It bewilders me,' stammered Gudrun.
`You won't stay long,' replied Ursula.
And Gudrun went along, grasping at release.
They drew away from the colliery region, over the curve of the hill, into the
purer country of the other side, towards Willey Green. Still the faint glamour
of blackness persisted over the fields and the wooded hills, and seemed darkly
to gleam in the air. It was a spring day, chill, with snatches of sunshine.
Yellow celandines showed out from the hedge-bottoms, and in the cottage gardens
of Willey Green, currant-bushes were breaking into leaf, and little flowers were
coming white on the grey alyssum that hung over the stone walls.
Turning, they passed down the high-road, that went between high banks towards
the church. There, in the lowest bend of the road, low under the trees, stood a
little group of expectant people, waiting to see the wedding. The daughter of
the chief mine-owner of the district, Thomas Crich, was getting married to a
naval officer.
`Let us go back,' said Gudrun, swerving away. `There are all those people.'
And she hung wavering in the road.
`Never mind them,' said Ursula, `they're all right. They all know me, they
don't matter.'
`But must we go through them?' asked Gudrun.
`They're quite all right, really,' said Ursula, going forward. And together
the two sisters approached the group of uneasy, watchful common people. They
were chiefly women, colliers' wives of the more shiftless sort. They had
watchful, underworld faces.
The two sisters held themselves tense, and went straight towards the gate.
The women made way for them, but barely sufficient, as if grudging to yield
ground. The sisters passed in silence through the stone gateway and up the
steps, on the red carpet, a policeman estimating their progress.
`What price the stockings!' said a voice at the back of Gudrun. A sudden
fierce anger swept over the girl, violent and murderous. She would have liked
them all annihilated, cleared away, so that the world was left clear for her.
How she hated walking up the churchyard path, along the red carpet, continuing
in motion, in their sight.
`I won't go into the church,' she said suddenly, with such final decision
that Ursula immediately halted, turned round, and branched off up a small side
path which led to the little private gate of the Grammar School, whose grounds
adjoined those of the church.
Just inside the gate of the school shrubbery, outside the churchyard, Ursula
sat down for a moment on the low stone wall under the laurel bushes, to rest.
Behind her, the large red building of the school rose up peacefully, the windows
all open for the holiday. Over the shrubs, before her, were the pale roofs and
tower of the old church. The sisters were hidden by the foliage.
Gudrun sat down in silence. Her mouth was shut close, her face averted. She
was regretting bitterly that she had ever come back. Ursula looked at her, and
thought how amazingly beautiful she was, flushed with discomfiture. But she
caused a constraint over Ursula's nature, a certain weariness. Ursula wished to
be alone, freed from the tightness, the enclosure of Gudrun's presence.
`Are we going to stay here?' asked Gudrun.
`I was only resting a minute,' said Ursula, getting up as if rebuked. `We
will stand in the corner by the fives-court, we shall see everything from
there.'
For the moment, the sunshine fell brightly into the churchyard, there was a
vague scent of sap and of spring, perhaps of violets from off the graves. Some
white daisies were out, bright as angels. In the air, the unfolding leaves of a
copper-beech were blood-red.
Punctually at eleven o'clock, the carriages began to arrive. There was a stir
in the crowd at the gate, a concentration as a carriage drove up, wedding guests
were mounting up the steps and passing along the red carpet to the church. They
were all gay and excited because the sun was shining.
Gudrun watched them closely, with objective curiosity. She saw each one as a
complete figure, like a character in a book, or a subject in a picture, or a
marionette in a theatre, a finished creation. She loved to recognise their
various characteristics, to place them in their true light, give them their own
surroundings, settle them for ever as they passed before her along the path to
the church. She knew them, they were finished, sealed and stamped and finished
with, for her. There was none that had anything unknown, unresolved, until the
Criches themselves began to appear. Then her interest was piqued. Here was
something not quite so preconcluded.
There came the mother, Mrs Crich, with her eldest son Gerald. She was a queer
unkempt figure, in spite of the attempts that had obviously been made to bring
her into line for the day. Her face was pale, yellowish, with a clear,
transparent skin, she leaned forward rather, her features were strongly marked,
handsome, with a tense, unseeing, predative look. Her colourless hair was
untidy, wisps floating down on to her sac coat of dark blue silk, from under her
blue silk hat. She looked like a woman with a monomania, furtive almost, but
heavily proud.
Her son was of a fair, sun-tanned type, rather above middle height, well-
made, and almost exaggeratedly well-dressed. But about him also was the strange,
guarded look, the unconscious glisten, as if he did not belong to the same
creation as the people about him. Gudrun lighted on him at once. There was
something northern about him that magnetised her. In his clear northern flesh
and his fair hair was a glisten like sunshine refracted through crystals of ice.
And he looked so new, unbroached, pure as an arctic thing. Perhaps he was thirty
years old, perhaps more. His gleaming beauty, maleness, like a young, good-
humoured, smiling wolf, did not blind her to the significant, sinister stillness
in his bearing, the lurking danger of his unsubdued temper. `His totem is the
wolf,' she repeated to herself. `His mother is an old, unbroken wolf.' And then
she experienced a keen paroxyism, a transport, as if she had made some
incredible discovery, known to nobody else on earth. A strange transport took
possession of her, all her veins were in a paroxysm of violent sensation. `Good
God!' she exclaimed to herself, `what is this?' And then, a moment after, she
was saying assuredly, `I shall know more of that man.' She was tortured with
desire to see him again, a nostalgia, a necessity to see him again, to make sure
it was not all a mistake, that she was not deluding herself, that she really
felt this strange and overwhelming sensation on his account, this knowledge of
him in her essence, this powerful apprehension of him. `Am I really
singled out for him in some way, is there really some pale gold, arctic light
that envelopes only us two?' she asked herself. And she could not believe it,
she remained in a muse, scarcely conscious of what was going on around.
The bridesmaids were here, and yet the bridegroom had not come. Ursula
wondered if something was amiss, and if the wedding would yet all go wrong. She
felt troubled, as if it rested upon her. The chief bridesmaids had arrived.
Ursula watched them come up the steps. One of them she knew, a tall, slow,
reluctant woman with a weight of fair hair and a pale, long face. This was
Hermione Roddice, a friend of the Criches. Now she came along, with her head
held up, balancing an enormous flat hat of pale yellow velvet, on which were
streaks of ostrich feathers, natural and grey. She drifted forward as if
scarcely conscious, her long blanched face lifted up, not to see the world. She
was rich. She wore a dress of silky, frail velvet, of pale yellow colour, and
she carried a lot of small rose-coloured cyclamens. Her shoes and stockings were
of brownish grey, like the feathers on her hat, her hair was heavy, she drifted
along with a peculiar fixity of the hips, a strange unwilling motion. She was
impressive, in her lovely pale-yellow and brownish-rose, yet macabre, something
repulsive. People were silent when she passed, impressed, roused, wanting to
jeer, yet for some reason silenced. Her long, pale face, that she carried lifted
up, somewhat in the Rossetti fashion, seemed almost drugged, as if a strange
mass of thoughts coiled in the darkness within her, and she was never allowed to
escape.
Ursula watched her with fascination. She knew her a little. She was the most
remarkable woman in the Midlands. Her father was a Derbyshire Baronet of the old
school, she was a woman of the new school, full of intellectuality, and heavy,
nerve-worn with consciousness. She was passionately interested in reform, her
soul was given up to the public cause. But she was a man's woman, it was the
manly world that held her.
She had various intimacies of mind and soul with various men of capacity.
Ursula knew, among these men, only Rupert Birkin, who was one of the school-
inspectors of the county. But Gudrun had met others, in London. Moving with her
artist friends in different kinds of society, Gudrun had already come to know a
good many people of repute and standing. She had met Hermione twice, but they
did not take to each other. It would be queer to meet again down here in the
Midlands, where their social standing was so diverse, after they had known each
other on terms of equality in the houses of sundry acquaintances in town. For
Gudrun had been a social success, and had her friends among the slack
aristocracy that keeps touch with the arts.
Hermione knew herself to be well-dressed; she knew herself to be the social
equal, if not far the superior, of anyone she was likely to meet in Willey
Green. She knew she was accepted in the world of culture and of intellect. She
was a Kulturtrager, a medium for the culture of ideas. With all that was
highest, whether in society or in thought or in public action, or even in art,
she was at one, she moved among the foremost, at home with them. No one could
put her down, no one could make mock of her, because she stood among the first,
and those that were against her were below her, either in rank, or in wealth, or
in high association of thought and progress and understanding. So, she was
invulnerable. All her life, she had sought to make herself invulnerable,
unassailable, beyond reach of the world's judgment.
And yet her soul was tortured, exposed. Even walking up the path to the
church, confident as she was that in every respect she stood beyond all vulgar
judgment, knowing perfectly that her appearance was complete and perfect,
according to the first standards, yet she suffered a torture, under her
confidence and her pride, feeling herself exposed to wounds and to mockery and
to despite. She always felt vulnerable, vulnerable, there was always a secret
chink in her armour. She did not know herself what it was. It was a lack of
robust self, she had no natural sufficiency, there was a terrible void, a lack,
a deficiency of being within her.
And she wanted someone to close up this deficiency, to close it up for ever.
She craved for Rupert Birkin. When he was there, she felt complete, she was
sufficient, whole. For the rest of time she was established on the sand, built
over a chasm, and, in spite of all her vanity and securities, any common maid-
servant of positive, robust temper could fling her down this bottomless pit of
insufficiency, by the slightest movement of jeering or contempt. And all the
while the pensive, tortured woman piled up her own defences of aesthetic
knowledge, and culture, and world-visions, and disinterestedness. Yet she could
never stop up the terrible gap of insufficiency.
If only Birkin would form a close and abiding connection with her, she would
be safe during this fretful voyage of life. He could make her sound and
triumphant, triumphant over the very angels of heaven. If only he would do it!
But she was tortured with fear, with misgiving. She made herself beautiful, she
strove so hard to come to that degree of beauty and advantage, when he should be
convinced. But always there was a deficiency.
He was perverse too. He fought her off, he always fought her off. The more
she strove to bring him to her, the more he battled her back. And they had been
lovers now, for years. Oh, it was so wearying, so aching; she was so tired. But
still she believed in herself. She knew he was trying to leave her. She knew he
was trying to break away from her finally, to be free. But still she believed in
her strength to keep him, she believed in her own higher knowledge. His own
knowledge was high, she was the central touchstone of truth. She only needed his
conjunction with her.
And this, this conjunction with her, which was his highest fulfilment also,
with the perverseness of a wilful child he wanted to deny. With the wilfulness
of an obstinate child, he wanted to break the holy connection that was between
them.
He would be at this wedding; he was to be groom's man. He would be in the
church, waiting. He would know when she came. She shuddered with nervous
apprehension and desire as she went through the church-door. He would be there,
surely he would see how beautiful her dress was, surely he would see how she had
made herself beautiful for him. He would understand, he would be able to see how
she was made for him, the first, how she was, for him, the highest. Surely at
last he would be able to accept his highest fate, he would not deny her.
In a little convulsion of too-tired yearning, she entered the church and
looked slowly along her cheeks for him, her slender body convulsed with
agitation. As best man, he would be standing beside the altar. She looked
slowly, deferring in her certainty.
And then, he was not there. A terrible storm came over her, as if she were
drowning. She was possessed by a devastating hopelessness. And she approached
mechanically to the altar. Never had she known such a pang of utter and final
hopelessness. It was beyond death, so utterly null, desert.
The bridegroom and the groom's man had not yet come. There was a growing
consternation outside. Ursula felt almost responsible. She could not bear it
that the bride should arrive, and no groom. The wedding must not be a fiasco, it
must not.
But here was the bride's carriage, adorned with ribbons and cockades. Gaily
the grey horses curvetted to their destination at the church-gate, a laughter in
the whole movement. Here was the quick of all laughter and pleasure. The door of
the carriage was thrown open, to let out the very blossom of the day. The people
on the roadway murmured faintly with the discontented murmuring of a crowd.
The father stepped out first into the air of the morning, like a shadow. He
was a tall, thin, careworn man, with a thin black beard that was touched with
grey. He waited at the door of the carriage patiently, self-obliterated.
In the opening of the doorway was a shower of fine foliage and flowers, a
whiteness of satin and lace, and a sound of a gay voice saying:
`How do I get out?'
A ripple of satisfaction ran through the expectant people. They pressed near
to receive her, looking with zest at the stooping blond head with its flower
buds, and at the delicate, white, tentative foot that was reaching down to the
step of the carriage. There was a sudden foaming rush, and the bride like a
sudden surf-rush, floating all white beside her father in the morning shadow of
trees, her veil flowing with laughter.
`That's done it!' she said.
She put her hand on the arm of her care-worn, sallow father, and frothing her
light draperies, proceeded over the eternal red carpet. Her father, mute and
yellowish, his black beard making him look more careworn, mounted the steps
stiffly, as if his spirit were absent; but the laughing mist of the bride went
along with him undiminished.
And no bridegroom had arrived! It was intolerable for her. Ursula, her heart
strained with anxiety, was watching the hill beyond; the white, descending road,
that should give sight of him. There was a carriage. It was running. It had just
come into sight. Yes, it was he. Ursula turned towards the bride and the people,
and, from her place of vantage, gave an inarticulate cry. She wanted to warn
them that he was coming. But her cry was inarticulate and inaudible, and she
flushed deeply, between her desire and her wincing confusion.
The carriage rattled down the hill, and drew near. There was a shout from the
people. The bride, who had just reached the top of the steps, turned round gaily
to see what was the commotion. She saw a confusion among the people, a cab
pulling up, and her lover dropping out of the carriage, and dodging among the
horses and into the crowd.
`Tibs! Tibs!' she cried in her sudden, mocking excitement, standing high on
the path in the sunlight and waving her bouquet. He, dodging with his hat in
his hand, had not heard.
`Tibs!' she cried again, looking down to him.
He glanced up, unaware, and saw the bride and her father standing on the path
above him. A queer, startled look went over his face. He hesitated for a moment.
Then he gathered himself together for a leap, to overtake her.
`Ah-h-h!' came her strange, intaken cry, as, on the reflex, she started,
turned and fled, scudding with an unthinkable swift beating of her white feet
and fraying of her white garments, towards the church. Like a hound the young
man was after her, leaping the steps and swinging past her father, his supple
haunches working like those of a hound that bears down on the quarry.
`Ay, after her!' cried the vulgar women below, carried suddenly into the
sport.
She, her flowers shaken from her like froth, was steadying herself to turn
the angle of the church. She glanced behind, and with a wild cry of laughter and
challenge, veered, poised, and was gone beyond the grey stone buttress. In
another instant the bridegroom, bent forward as he ran, had caught the angle of
the silent stone with his hand, and had swung himself out of sight, his supple,
strong loins vanishing in pursuit.
Instantly cries and exclamations of excitement burst from the crowd at the
gate. And then Ursula noticed again the dark, rather stooping figure of Mr
Crich, waiting suspended on the path, watching with expressionless face the
flight to the church. It was over, and he turned round to look behind him, at
the figure of Rupert Birkin, who at once came forward and joined him.
`We'll bring up the rear,' said Birkin, a faint smile on his face.
`Ay!' replied the father laconically. And the two men turned together up the
path.
Birkin was as thin as Mr Crich, pale and ill-looking. His figure was narrow
but nicely made. He went with a slight trail of one foot, which came only from
self-consciousness. Although he was dressed correctly for his part, yet there
was an innate incongruity which caused a slight ridiculousness in his
appearance. His nature was clever and separate, he did not fit at all in the
conventional occasion. Yet he subordinated himself to the common idea,
travestied himself.
He affected to be quite ordinary, perfectly and marvellously commonplace. And
he did it so well, taking the tone of his surroundings, adjusting himself
quickly to his interlocutor and his circumstance, that he achieved a
verisimilitude of ordinary commonplaceness that usually propitiated his
onlookers for the moment, disarmed them from attacking his singleness.
Now he spoke quite easily and pleasantly to Mr Crich, as they walked along
the path; he played with situations like a man on a tight-rope: but always on a
tight-rope, pretending nothing but ease.
`I'm sorry we are so late,' he was saying. `We couldn't find a button-hook,
so it took us a long time to button our boots. But you were to the moment.'
`We are usually to time,' said Mr Crich.
`And I'm always late,' said Birkin. `But today I was really punctual,
only accidentally not so. I'm sorry.'
The two men were gone, there was nothing more to see, for the time. Ursula
was left thinking about Birkin. He piqued her, attracted her, and annoyed her.
She wanted to know him more. She had spoken with him once or twice, but only
in his official capacity as inspector. She thought he seemed to acknowledge some
kinship between her and him, a natural, tacit understanding, a using of the same
language. But there had been no time for the understanding to develop. And
something kept her from him, as well as attracted her to him. There was a
certain hostility, a hidden ultimate reserve in him, cold and inaccessible.
Yet she wanted to know him.
`What do you think of Rupert Birkin?' she asked, a little reluctantly, of
Gudrun. She did not want to discuss him.
`What do I think of Rupert Birkin?' repeated Gudrun. `I think he's attractive
decidedly attractive. What I can't stand about him is his way with other
people his way of treating any little fool as if she were his greatest
consideration. One feels so awfully sold, oneself.'
`Why does he do it?' said Ursula.
`Because he has no real critical faculty of people, at all events,' said
Gudrun. `I tell you, he treats any little fool as he treats me or you and
it's such an insult.'
`Oh, it is,' said Ursula. `One must discriminate.'
`One must discriminate,' repeated Gudrun. `But he's a wonderful chap,
in other respects a marvellous personality. But you can't trust him.'
`Yes,' said Ursula vaguely. She was always forced to assent to Gudrun's
pronouncements, even when she was not in accord altogether.
The sisters sat silent, waiting for the wedding party to come out. Gudrun was
impatient of talk. She wanted to think about Gerald Crich. She wanted to see if
the strong feeling she had got from him was real. She wanted to have herself
ready.
Inside the church, the wedding was going on. Hermione Roddice was thinking
only of Birkin. He stood near her. She seemed to gravitate physically towards
him. She wanted to stand touching him. She could hardly be sure he was near her,
if she did not touch him. Yet she stood subjected through the wedding service.
She had suffered so bitterly when he did not come, that still she was dazed.
Still she was gnawed as by a neuralgia, tormented by his potential absence from
her. She had awaited him in a faint delirium of nervous torture. As she stood
bearing herself pensively, the rapt look on her face, that seemed spiritual,
like the angels, but which came from torture, gave her a certain poignancy that
tore his heart with pity. He saw her bowed head, her rapt face, the face of an
almost demoniacal ecstatic. Feeling him looking, she lifted her face and sought
his eyes, her own beautiful grey eyes flaring him a great signal. But he avoided
her look, she sank her head in torment and shame, the gnawing at her heart going
on. And he too was tortured with shame, and ultimate dislike, and with acute
pity for her, because he did not want to meet her eyes, he did not want to
receive her flare of recognition.
The bride and bridegroom were married, the party went into the vestry.
Hermione crowded involuntarily up against Birkin, to touch him. And he endured
it.
Outside, Gudrun and Ursula listened for their father's playing on the organ.
He would enjoy playing a wedding march. Now the married pair were coming! The
bells were ringing, making the air shake. Ursula wondered if the trees and the
flowers could feel the vibration, and what they thought of it, this strange
motion in the air. The bride was quite demure on the arm of the bridegroom, who
stared up into the sky before him, shutting and opening his eyes unconsciously,
as if he were neither here nor there. He looked rather comical, blinking and
trying to be in the scene, when emotionally he was violated by his exposure to a
crowd. He looked a typical naval officer, manly, and up to his duty.
Birkin came with Hermione. She had a rapt, triumphant look, like the fallen
angels restored, yet still subtly demoniacal, now she held Birkin by the arm.
And he was expressionless, neutralised, possessed by her as if it were his fate,
without question.
Gerald Crich came, fair, good-looking, healthy, with a great reserve of
energy. He was erect and complete, there was a strange stealth glistening
through his amiable, almost happy appearance. Gudrun rose sharply and went away.
She could not bear it. She wanted to be alone, to know this strange, sharp
inoculation that had changed the whole temper of her blood.
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