Mr. Britling Sees It Through
BOOK ONE
MATCHING'S EASY AT EASE
CHAPTER THE FOURTH
MR. BRITLING IN SOLILOQUY
§ 1
Very different from the painful contentment of the bruised and broken Mr.
Direck was the state of mind of his unwounded host. He too was sleepless, but
sleepless without exaltation. The day had been too much for him altogether; his
head, to borrow an admirable American expression, was "busy."
How busy it was, a whole chapter will be needed to describe....
The impression Mr. Britling had made upon Mr. Direck was one of indefatigable
happiness. But there were times when Mr. Britling was called upon to pay for his
general cheerful activity in lump sums of bitter sorrow. There were nights—and
especially after seasons of exceptional excitement and nervous activity—when the
reckoning would be presented and Mr. Britling would welter prostrate and
groaning under a stormy sky of unhappiness—active insatiable unhappiness—a
beating with rods.
The sorrows of the sanguine temperament are brief but furious; the world
knows little of them. The world has no need to reckon with them. They cause no
suicides and few crimes. They hurry past, smiting at their victim as they go.
None the less they are misery. Mr. Britling in these moods did not perhaps
experience the grey and hopeless desolations of the melancholic nor the red
damnation of the choleric, but he saw a world that bristled with misfortune and
error, with poisonous thorns and traps and swampy places and incurable
blunderings. An almost insupportable remorse for being Mr.
Britling would pursue him—justifying itself upon a hundred counts....
And for being such a Britling!...
Why—he revived again that bitter question of a thousand and one unhappy
nights—why was he such a fool? Such a hasty fool? Why couldn't he look before he
leapt? Why did he take risks? Why was he always so ready to act upon the
supposition that all was bound to go well? (He might as well have asked why he
had quick brown eyes.)
Why, for instance, hadn't he adhered to the resolution of the early morning?
He had begun with an extremity of caution....
It was a characteristic of these moods of Mr. Britling that they produced a
physical restlessness. He kept on turning over and then turning over again, and
sitting up and lying back, like a martyr on a gridiron....
This was just the latest instance of a life-long trouble. Will there ever be
a sort of man whose thoughts are quick and his acts slow? Then indeed we shall
have a formidable being. Mr. Britling's thoughts were quick and sanguine and his
actions even more eager than his thoughts. Already while he was a young man Mr.
Britling had found his acts elbow their way through the hurry of his ideas and
precipitate humiliations. Long before his reasons were marshalled, his
resolutions were formed. He had attempted a thousand remonstrances with himself;
he had sought to remedy the defects in his own character by written inscriptions
in his bedroom and memoranda inside his watch case. "Keep steady!" was one of
them. "Keep the End in View." And, "Go steadfastly, coherently, continuously;
only so can you go where you will." In distrusting all impulse, scrutinising all
imagination, he was persuaded lay his one prospect of escape from the surprise
of countless miseries. Otherwise he danced among glass bombs and barbed
wire.
There had been a time when he could exhort himself to
such fundamental charge and go through phases of the severest discipline. Always
at last to be taken by surprise from some unexpected quarter. At last he had
ceased to hope for any triumph so radical. He had been content to believe that
in recent years age and a gathering habit of wisdom had somewhat slowed his
leaping purpose. That if he hadn't overcome he had at least to a certain extent
minimised it. But this last folly was surely the worst. To charge through this
patient world with—how much did the car weigh? A ton certainly and perhaps
more—reckless of every risk. Not only to himself but others. At this thought, he
clutched the steering wheel again. Once more he saw the bent back of the
endangered cyclist, once more he felt rather than saw the seething approach of
the motor bicycle, and then through a long instant he drove helplessly at the
wall....
Hell perhaps is only one such incident, indefinitely prolonged....
Anything might have been there in front of him. And indeed now, out of the
dreamland to which he could not escape something had come, something that
screamed sharply....
"Good God!" he cried, "if I had hit a child! I might have hit a child!" The
hypothesis flashed into being with the thought, tried to escape and was caught.
It was characteristic of Mr. Britling's nocturnal imagination that he should
individualise this child quite sharply as rather plain and slender, with reddish
hair, staring eyes, and its ribs crushed in a vivid and dreadful manner, pinned
against the wall, mixed up with some bricks, only to be extracted, oh!
horribly.
But this was not fair! He had hurt no child! He had merely pitched out Mr.
Direck and broken his arm....
It wasn't his merit that the child hadn't been there!
The child might have been there!
Mere luck.
He lay staring in despair—as an involuntary God might stare at many a thing
in this amazing universe—staring at the little victim his imagination had called
into being only to destroy....
§ 2
If he had not crushed a child other people had. Such things happened.
Vicariously at any rate he had crushed many children....
Why are children ever crushed?
And suddenly all the pain and destruction and remorse of all the accidents in
the world descended upon Mr. Britling.
No longer did he ask why am I such a fool, but why are we all such fools? He
became Man on the automobile of civilisation, crushing his thousands daily in
his headlong and yet aimless career....
That was a trick of Mr. Britling's mind. It had this tendency to spread
outward from himself to generalised issues. Many minds are like that nowadays.
He was not so completely individualised as people are supposed to be
individualised—in our law, in our stories, in our moral judgments. He had a
vicarious factor. He could slip from concentrated reproaches to the liveliest
remorse for himself as The Automobilist in General, or for himself as England,
or for himself as Man. From remorse for smashing his guest and his automobile he
could pass by what was for him the most imperceptible of transitions to remorse
for every accident that has ever happened through the error of an automobilist
since automobiles began. All that long succession of blunderers became Mr.
Britling. Or rather Mr. Britling became all that vast succession of
blunderers.
These fluctuating lapses from individuation made Mr. Britling a perplexity to
many who judged only by the old personal standards. At times he seemed a monster
of cantankerous self-righteousness, whom nobody could please or satisfy, but indeed when he was most pitiless about the
faults of his race or nation he was really reproaching himself, and when he
seemed more egotistical and introspective and self-centred he was really
ransacking himself for a clue to that same confusion of purposes that waste the
hope and strength of humanity. And now through the busy distresses of the night
it would have perplexed a watching angel to have drawn the line and shown when
Mr. Britling, was grieving for his own loss and humiliation and when he was
grieving for these common human weaknesses of which he had so large a share.
And this double refraction of his mind by which a concentrated and
individualised Britling did but present a larger impersonal Britling beneath,
carried with it a duplication of his conscience and sense of responsibility. To
his personal conscience he was answerable for his private honour and his debts
and the Dower House he had made and so on, but to his impersonal conscience he
was answerable for the whole world. The world from the latter point of view was
his egg. He had a subconscious delusion that he had laid it. He had a
subconscious suspicion that he had let it cool and that it was addled. He had an
urgency to incubate it. The variety and interest of his talk was largely due to
that persuasion, it was a perpetual attempt to spread his mental feathers over
the task before him....
§ 3
After this much of explanation it is possible to go on to the task which
originally brought Mr. Direck to Matching's Easy, the task that Massachusetts
society had sent him upon, the task of organising the mental unveiling of Mr.
Britling. Mr. Direck saw Mr. Britling only in the daylight, and with an
increasing distraction of the attention towards Miss Cecily Corner. We may see
him rather more clearly in the darkness, without any distraction except
his own.
Now the smashing of Gladys was not only the source of a series of reproaches
and remorses directly arising out of the smash; it had also a wide system of
collateral consequences, which were also banging and blundering their way
through the Britling mind. It was extraordinarily inconvenient in quite another
direction that the automobile should be destroyed. It upset certain plans of Mr.
Britling's in a direction growing right out from all the Dower House world in
which Mr. Direck supposed him to be completely set and rooted. There were
certain matters from which Mr. Britling had been averting his mind most
strenuously throughout the week-end. Now, there was no averting his mind any
more.
Mr. Britling was entangled in a love affair. It was, to be exact, and
disregarding minor affinities, his eighth love affair. And the new automobile,
so soon as he could drive it efficiently, was to have played quite a solvent and
conclusive part in certain entangled complications of this relationship.
A man of lively imagination and quick impulses naturally has love affairs as
he drives himself through life, just as he naturally has accidents if he drives
an automobile.
And the peculiar relations that existed between Mr. Britling and Mrs.
Britling tended inevitably to make these love affairs troublesome, undignified
and futile. Especially when they were viewed from the point of view of
insomnia.
Mr. Britling's first marriage had been a passionately happy one. His second
was by comparison a marriage in neutral tint. There is much to be said for that
extreme Catholic theory which would make marriage not merely lifelong but
eternal. Certainly Mr. Britling would have been a finer if not a happier
creature if his sentimental existence could have died with his first wife or
continued only in his love for their son. He had married in the glow of youth,
he had had two years of clean and simple loving, helping, quarrelling and the
happy ending of quarrels. Something went out of him into
all that, which could not be renewed again. In his first extremity of grief he
knew that perfectly well—and then afterwards he forgot it. While there is life
there is imagination, which makes and forgets and goes on.
He met Edith under circumstances that did not in any way recall his lost
Mary. He met her, as people say, "socially"; Mary, on the other hand, had been a
girl at Newnham while he was a fellow of Pembroke, and there had been something
of accident and something of furtiveness in their lucky discovery of each other.
There had been a flush in it; there was dash in it. But Edith he saw and chose
and had to woo. There was no rushing together; there was solicitation and
assent. Edith was a Bachelor of Science of London University and several things
like that, and she looked upon the universe under her broad forehead and
broad-waving brown hair with quiet watchful eyes that had nothing whatever to
hide, a thing so incredible to Mr. Britling that he had loved and married her
very largely for the serenity of her mystery. And for a time after their
marriage he sailed over those brown depths plumbing furiously.
Of course he did not make his former passion for Mary at all clear to her.
Indeed, while he was winning Edith it was by no means clear to himself. He was
making a new emotional drama, and consciously and subconsciously he dismissed a
hundred reminiscences that sought to invade the new experience, and which would
have been out of key with it. And without any deliberate intention to that
effect he created an atmosphere between himself and Edith in which any
discussion of Mary was reduced to a minimum, and in which Hugh was accepted
rather than explained. He contrived to believe that she understood all sorts of
unsayable things; he invented miracles of quite uncongenial mute
mutuality....
It was over the chess-board that they first began to discover their extensive
difficulties of sympathy. Mr. Britling's play was
characterised by a superficial brilliance, much generosity and extreme
unsoundness; he always moved directly his opponent had done so—and then
reflected on the situation. His reflection was commonly much wiser than his
moves. Mrs. Britling was, as it were, a natural antagonist to her husband; she
was as calm as he was irritable. She was never in a hurry to move, and never
disposed to make a concession. Quietly, steadfastly, by caution and
deliberation, without splendour, without error, she had beaten him at chess
until it led to such dreadful fits of anger that he had to renounce the game
altogether. After every such occasion he would be at great pains to explain that
he had merely been angry with himself. Nevertheless he felt, and would not let
himself think (while she concluded from incidental heated phrases), that that
was not the complete truth about the outbreak.
Slowly they got through the concealments of that specious explanation.
Temperamentally they were incompatible.
They were profoundly incompatible. In all things she was defensive. She never
came out; never once had she surprised him halfway upon the road to her. He had
to go all the way to her and knock and ring, and then she answered faithfully.
She never surprised him even by unkindness. If he had a cut finger she would
bind it up very skilfully and healingly, but unless he told her she never
discovered he had a cut finger. He was amazed she did not know of it before it
happened. He piped and she did not dance. That became the formula of his
grievance. For several unhappy years she thwarted him and disappointed him,
while he filled her with dumb inexplicable distresses. He had been at first so
gay an activity, and then he was shattered; fragments of him were still as gay
and attractive as ever, but between were outbreaks of anger, of hostility, of
something very like malignity. Only very slowly did they realise the truth of
their relationship and admit to themselves that the fine
bud of love between them had failed to flower, and only after long years were
they able to delimit boundaries where they had imagined union, and to
become—allies. If it had been reasonably possible for them to part without
mutual injury and recrimination they would have done so, but two children
presently held them, and gradually they had to work out the broad mutual
toleration of their later relations. If there was no love and delight between
them there was a real habitual affection and much mutual help. She was proud of
his steady progress to distinction, proud of each intimation of respect he won;
she admired and respected his work; she recognised that he had some magic, of
liveliness and unexpectedness that was precious and enviable. So far as she
could help him she did. And even when he knew that there was nothing behind it,
that it was indeed little more than an imaginative inertness, he could still
admire and respect her steady dignity and her consistent honourableness. Her
practical capacity was for him a matter for continual self-congratulation. He
marked the bright order of her household, her flowering borders, the prosperous
high-born roses of her garden with a wondering appreciation. He had never been
able to keep anything in order. He relied more and more upon her. He showed his
respect for her by a scrupulous attention to her dignity, and his confidence by
a franker and franker emotional neglect. Because she expressed so little he
succeeded in supposing she felt little, and since nothing had come out of the
brown depths of her eyes he saw fit at last to suppose no plumb-line would ever
find anything there. He pursued his interests; he reached out to this and that;
he travelled; she made it a matter of conscience to let him go unhampered; she
felt, she thought—unrecorded; he did, and he expressed and re-expressed and
over-expressed, and started this and that with quick irrepressible activity, and
so there had accumulated about them the various items of the life to whose more
ostensible accidents Mr. Direck was now for an indefinite
period joined.
It was in the nature of Mr. Britling to incur things; it was in the nature of
Mrs. Britling to establish them. Mr. Britling had taken the Dower House on
impulse, and she had made it a delightful home. He had discovered the disorderly
delights of mixed Sunday hockey one weekend at Pontings that had promised to be
dull, and she had made it an institution.... He had come to her with his orphan
boy and a memory of a passionate first loss that sometimes, and more
particularly at first, he seemed to have forgotten altogether, and at other
times was only too evidently lamenting with every fibre of his being. She had
taken the utmost care of the relics of her duskily pretty predecessor that she
found in unexpected abundance in Mr. Britling's possession, and she had done her
duty by her sometimes rather incomprehensible stepson. She never allowed herself
to examine the state of her heart towards this youngster; it is possible that
she did not perceive the necessity for any such examination....
So she went through life, outwardly serene and dignified, one of a great
company of rather fastidious, rather unenterprising women who have turned for
their happiness to secondary things, to those fair inanimate things of household
and garden which do not turn again and rend one, to aestheticisms and
delicacies, to order and seemliness. Moreover she found great satisfaction in
the health and welfare, the growth and animation of her own two little boys. And
no one knew, and perhaps even she had contrived to forget, the phases of
astonishment and disillusionment, of doubt and bitterness and secret tears, that
spread out through the years in which she had slowly realised that this strange,
fitful, animated man who had come to her, vowing himself hers, asking for her so
urgently and persuasively, was ceasing, had ceased, to love her, that his heart
had escaped her, that she had missed it; she never dreamt that she had hurt it,
and that after its first urgent, tumultuous,
incomprehensible search for her it had hidden itself bitterly away....
§ 4
The mysterious processes of nature that had produced Mr. Britling had
implanted in him an obstinate persuasion that somewhere in the world, from some
human being, it was still possible to find the utmost satisfaction for every
need and craving. He could imagine as existing, as waiting for him, he knew not
where, a completeness of understanding, a perfection of response, that would
reach all the gamut of his feelings and sensations from the most poetical to the
most entirely physical, a beauty of relationship so transfiguring that not only
would she—it went without saying that this completion was a woman—be perfectly
beautiful in its light but, what was manifestly more incredible, that he too
would be perfectly beautiful and quite at his ease.... In her presence there
could be no self-reproaches, no lapses, no limitations, nothing but happiness
and the happiest activities.... To such a persuasion half the imaginative people
in the world succumb as readily and naturally as ducklings take to water. They
do not doubt its truth any more than a thirsty camel doubts that presently it
will come to a spring.
This persuasion is as foolish as though a camel hoped that some day it would
drink from such a spring that it would never thirst again. For the most part Mr.
Britling ignored its presence in his mind, and resisted the impulses it started.
But at odd times, and more particularly in the afternoon and while travelling
and in between books, Mr. Britling so far succumbed to this strange expectation
of a wonder round the corner that he slipped the anchors of his humour and
self-contempt and joined the great cruising brotherhood of the Pilgrims of
Love....
In fact—though he himself had never made a reckoning of
it—he had been upon eight separate cruises. He was now upon the eighth....
Between these various excursions—they took him round and about the world, so
to speak, they cast him away on tropical beaches, they left him dismasted on
desolate seas, they involved the most startling interventions and the most
inconvenient consequences—there were interludes of penetrating philosophy. For
some years the suspicion had been growing up in Mr. Britling's mind that in
planting this persuasion in his being, the mysterious processes of Nature had
been, perhaps for some purely biological purpose, pulling, as people say, his
leg, that there were not these perfect responses, that loving a woman is a thing
one does thoroughly once for all—or so—and afterwards recalls regrettably in a
series of vain repetitions, and that the career of the Pilgrim of Love, so soon
as you strip off its credulous glamour, is either the most pitiful or the most
vulgar and vile of perversions from the proper conduct of life. But this
suspicion had not as yet grown to prohibitive dimensions with him, it was not
sufficient to resist the seasons of high tide, the sudden promise of the
salt-edged breeze, the invitation of the hovering sea-bird; and he was now
concealing beneath the lively surface of activities with which Mr. Direck was
now familiar, a very extensive system of distresses arising out of the latest,
the eighth of these digressional adventures....
Mr. Britling had got into it very much as he had got into the ditch on the
morning before his smash. He hadn't thought the affair out and he hadn't looked
carefully enough. And it kept on developing in just the ways he would rather
that it didn't.
The seventh affair had been very disconcerting. He had made a fool of himself
with quite a young girl; he blushed to think how young; it hadn't gone very far,
but it had made his nocturnal reflections so disagreeable that he had—by no
means for the first time—definitely and forever given up
these foolish dreams of love. And when Mrs. Harrowdean swam into his circle, she
seemed just exactly what was wanted to keep his imagination out of mischief. She
came bearing flattery to the pitch of adoration. She was the brightest and
cleverest of young widows. She wrote quite admirably criticism in the
Scrutator and the Sectarian, and occasionally poetry in the
Right Review—when she felt disposed to do so. She had an intermittent
vein of high spirits that was almost better than humour and made her quickly
popular with most of the people she met, and she was only twenty miles away in
her pretty house and her absurd little jolly park.
There was something, she said, in his thought and work that was like walking
in mountains. She came to him because she wanted to clamber about the peaks and
glens of his mind.
It was natural to reply that he wasn't by any means the serene mountain
elevation she thought him, except perhaps for a kind of loneliness....
She was a great reader of eighteenth century memoirs, and some she conveyed
to him. Her mental quality was all in the vein of the friendships of Rousseau
and Voltaire, and pleasantly and trippingly she led him along the primrose path
of an intellectual liaison. She came first to Matching's Easy, where she was
sweet and bright and vividly interested and a great contrast to Mrs. Britling,
and then he and she met in London, and went off together with a fine sense of
adventure for a day at Richmond, and then he took some work with him to her
house and stayed there....
Then she went away into Scotland for a time and he wanted her again
tremendously and clamoured for her eloquently, and then it was apparent and
admitted between them that they were admirably in love, oh! immensely in
love.
The transitions from emotional mountaineering to ardent intimacies were so
rapid and impulsive that each phase obliterated its
predecessor, and it was only with a vague perplexity that Mr. Britling found
himself transferred from the rôle of a mountainous objective for pretty little
pilgrims to that of a sedulous lover in pursuit of the happiness of one of the
most uncertain, intricate, and entrancing of feminine personalities. This was
not at all his idea of the proper relations between men and women, but Mrs.
Harrowdean had a way of challenging his gallantry. She made him run about for
her; she did not demand but she commanded presents and treats and surprises; she
even developed a certain jealousy in him. His work began to suffer from
interruptions. Yet they had glowing and entertaining moments together that could
temper his rebellious thoughts with the threat of irreparable loss. "One must
love, and all things in life are imperfect," was how Mr. Britling expressed his
reasons for submission. And she had a hold upon him too in a certain facile
pitifulness. She was little; she could be stung sometimes by the slightest touch
and then her blue eyes would be bright with tears.
Those possible tears could weigh at times even more than those possible lost
embraces.
And there was Oliver.
Oliver was a person Mr. Britling had never seen. He grew into the scheme of
things by insensible gradations. He was a government official in London; he was,
she said, extraordinarily dull, he was lacking altogether in Mr. Britling's
charm and interest, but he was faithful and tender and true. And considerably
younger than Mr. Britling. He asked nothing but to love. He offered honourable
marriage. And when one's heart was swelling unendurably one could weep in safety
on his patient shoulder. This patient shoulder of Oliver's ultimately became Mr.
Britling's most exasperating rival.
She liked to vex him with Oliver. She liked to vex him generally. Indeed in
this by no means abnormal love affair, there was a very strong antagonism. She
seemed to resent the attraction Mr. Britling had for her
and the emotions and pleasure she had with him. She seemed under the sway of an
instinctive desire to make him play heavily for her, in time, in emotion, in
self-respect. It was intolerable to her that he could take her easily and
happily. That would be taking her cheaply. She valued his gifts by the bother
they cost him, and was determined that the path of true love should not, if she
could help it, run smooth. Mr. Britling on the other hand was of the school of
polite and happy lovers. He thought it outrageous to dispute and contradict, and
he thought that making love was a cheerful, comfortable thing to be done in a
state of high good humour and intense mutual appreciation. This levity offended
the lady's pride. She drew unfavourable contrasts with Oliver. If Oliver lacked
charm he certainly did not lack emotion. He desired sacrifice, it seemed, almost
more than satisfactions. Oliver was a person of the most exemplary
miserableness; he would weep copiously and frequently. She could always make him
weep when she wanted to do so. By holding out hopes and then dashing them if by
no other expedient. Why did Mr. Britling never weep? She wept.
Some base streak of competitiveness in Mr. Britling's nature made it seem
impossible that he should relinquish the lady to Oliver. Besides, then, what
would he do with his dull days, his afternoons, his need for a properly
demonstrated affection?
So Mr. Britling trod the path of his eighth digression, rather overworked in
the matter of flowers and the selection of small jewellery, stalked by the
invisible and indefatigable Oliver, haunted into an unwilling industry of
attentions—attentions on the model of the professional lover of the French
novels—by the memory and expectation of tearful scenes. "Then you don't love me!
And it's all spoilt. I've risked talk and my reputation.... I was a fool ever to
dream of making love beautifully...."
Exactly like running your car into a soft wet ditch when you cannot get out
and you cannot get on. And your work and your interests waiting and waiting for
you!...
The car itself was an outcome of the affair. It was Mrs. Harrowdean's idea,
she thought chiefly of pleasant expeditions to friendly inns in remote parts of
the country, inns with a flavour of tacit complicity, but it fell in very
pleasantly with Mr. Britling's private resentment at the extraordinary
inconvenience of the railway communications between Matching's Easy and her
station at Pyecrafts, which involved a journey to Liverpool Street and a long
wait at a junction. And now the car was smashed up—just when he had acquired
skill enough to take it over to Pyecrafts without shame, and on Tuesday or
Wednesday at latest he would have to depart in the old way by the London
train....
Only the most superficial mind would assert nowadays that man is a reasonable
creature. Man is an unreasonable creature, and it was entirely unreasonable and
human for Mr. Britling during his nocturnal self-reproaches to mix up his secret
resentment at his infatuation for Mrs. Harrowdean with his ill-advised attack
upon the wall of Brandismead Park. He ought never to have bought that car; he
ought never to have been so ready to meet Mrs. Harrowdean more than
half-way.
What exacerbated his feeling about Mrs. Harrowdean was a new line she had
recently taken with regard to Mrs. Britling. From her first rash assumption that
Mr. Britling was indifferent to his wife, she had come to realise that on the
contrary he was in some ways extremely tender about his wife. This struck her as
an outrageous disloyalty. Instead of appreciating a paradox she resented an
infidelity. She smouldered with perplexed resentment for some days, and then
astonished her lover by a series of dissertations of a hostile and devastating
nature upon the lady of the Dower House.
He tried to imagine he hadn't heard all that he had heard, but Mrs.
Harrowdean had a nimble pen and nimbler afterthoughts, and once her mind had got
to work upon the topic she developed her offensive in half-a-dozen brilliant
letters.... On the other hand she professed a steadily increasing passion for
Mr. Britling. And to profess passion for Mr. Britling was to put him under a
sense of profound obligation—because indeed he was a modest man. He found
himself in an emotional quandary.
You see, if Mrs. Harrowdean had left Mrs. Britling alone everything would
have been quite tolerable. He considered Mrs. Harrowdean a charming human being,
and altogether better than he deserved. Ever so much better. She was all
initiative and response and that sort of thing. And she was so discreet. She had
her own reputation to think about, and one or two of her predecessors—God rest
the ashes of those fires!—had not been so discreet. Yet one could not have this
sort of thing going on behind Edith's back. All sorts of things one might have
going on behind Edith's back, but not this writing and saying of perfectly
beastly things about Edith. Nothing could alter the fact that Edith was his
honour....
§ 5
Throughout the week-end Mr. Britling had kept this trouble well battened
down. He had written to Mrs. Harrowdean a brief ambiguous note saying, "I am
thinking over all that you have said," and after that he had scarcely thought
about her at all. Or at least he had always contrived to be much more vividly
thinking about something else. But now in these night silences the suppressed
trouble burst hatches and rose about him.
What a mess he had made of the whole scheme of his emotional life! There had
been a time when he had started out as gaily with his passions and his honour as
he had started out with Gladys to go to Market Saffron. He
had as little taste for complications as he had for ditches. And now his
passions and his honour were in a worse case even than poor muddy smashed up
Gladys as the cart-horses towed her off, for she at any rate might be repaired.
But he—he was a terribly patched fabric of explanations now. Not indeed that he
had ever stooped to explanations. But there he was! Far away, like a star seen
down the length of a tunnel, was that first sad story of a love as clean as
starlight. It had been all over by eight-and-twenty and he could find it in his
heart to grieve that he had ever given a thought to love again. He should have
lived a decent widower.... Then Edith had come into his life, Edith that honest
and unconscious defaulter. And there again he should have stuck to his
disappointment. He had stuck to it—nine days out of every ten. It's the tenth
day, it's the odd seductive moment, it's the instant of confident pride—and
there is your sanguine temperament in the ditch.
He began to recapitulate items in the catalogue of his escapades, and the
details of his automobile misadventures mixed themselves up with the story of
his heart steering. For example there was that tremendous Siddons affair. He had
been taking the corner of a girlish friendship and he had taken it altogether
too far. What a frightful mess that had been! When once one is off the road
anything may happen, from a crumpled mud-guard to the car on the top of you. And
there was his forty miles an hour spurt with the great and gifted Delphine
Marquise—for whom he was to have written a play and been a perfect Annunzio.
Until Willersley appeared—very like the motor-cyclist—buzzing in the opposite
direction. And then had ensued angers, humiliations....
Had every man this sort of crowded catalogue? Was every forty-five-year-old
memory a dark tunnel receding from the star of youth? It is surely a pity that
life cannot end at thirty. It comes to one clean and in perfect order....
Is experience worth having?
What a clean, straight thing the spirit of youth is. It is like a bright new
spear. It is like a finely tempered sword. The figure of his boy took possession
of his mind, his boy who looked out on the world with his mother's, dark eyes,
the slender son of that whole-hearted first love. He was a being at once fine
and simple, an intimate mystery. Must he in his turn get dented and wrinkled and
tarnished?
The boy was in trouble. What was the trouble?
Was it some form of the same trouble that had so tangled and tainted and
scarred the private pride of his father? And how was it possible for Mr.
Britling, disfigured by heedless misadventures, embarrassed by complications and
concealments, to help this honest youngster out of his perplexities? He imagined
possible forms of these perplexities. Graceless forms. Ugly forms. Such forms as
only the nocturnal imagination would have dared present....
Oh, why had he been such a Britling? Why was he still such a Britling?
Mr. Britling sat up in his bed and beat at the bedclothes with his fists. He
uttered uncompleted vows, "From this hour forth ... from this hour
forth...."
He must do something, he felt. At any rate he had his experiences. He could
warn. He could explain away. Perhaps he might help to extricate, if things had
got to that pitch.
Should he write to his son? For a time he revolved a long, tactful letter in
his mind. But that was impossible. Suppose the trouble was something quite
different? It would have to be a letter in the most general terms....
§ 6
It was in the doubly refracting nature of Mr. Britling's mind that while he
was deploring his inefficiency in regard to his son, he was
also deploring the ineffectiveness of all his generation of parents. Quite
insensibly his mind passed over to the generalised point of view.
In his talks with Mr. Direck, Mr. Britling could present England as a great
and amiable spectacle of carelessness and relaxation, but was it indeed an
amiable spectacle? The point that Mr. Direck had made about the barn rankled in
his thoughts. His barn was a barn no longer, his farmyard held no cattle; he was
just living laxly in the buildings that ancient needs had made, he was living on
the accumulated prosperity of former times, the spendthrift heir of toiling
generations. Not only was he a pampered, undisciplined sort of human being; he
was living in a pampered, undisciplined sort of community. The two things went
together.... This confounded Irish business, one could laugh at it in the
daylight, but was it indeed a thing to laugh at? We were drifting lazily towards
a real disaster. We had a government that seemed guided by the principles of Mr.
Micawber, and adopted for its watchword "Wait and see." For months now this
trouble had grown more threatening. Suppose presently that civil war broke out
in Ireland! Suppose presently that these irritated, mishandled suffragettes did
some desperate irreconcilable thing, assassinated for example! The bomb in
Westminster Abbey the other day might have killed a dozen people.... Suppose the
smouldering criticism of British rule in India and Egypt were fanned by
administrative indiscretions into a flame....
And then suppose Germany had made trouble....
Usually Mr. Britling kept his mind off Germany. In the daytime he pretended
Germany meant nothing to England. He hated alarmists. He hated disagreeable
possibilities. He declared the idea of a whole vast nation waiting to strike at
us incredible. Why should they? You cannot have seventy million lunatics.... But
in the darkness of the night one cannot dismiss things in this way. Suppose, after all, their army was more than a parade,
their navy more than a protest?
We might be caught—It was only in the vast melancholia of such occasions that
Mr. Britling would admit such possibilities, but we might be caught by some
sudden declaration of war.... And how should we face it?
He recalled the afternoon's talk at Claverings and such samples of our
governmental machinery as he chanced to number among his personal acquaintance.
Suppose suddenly the enemy struck! With Raeburn and his friends to defend us! Or
if the shock tumbled them out of power, then with these vituperative Tories,
these spiteful advocates of weak tyrannies and privileged pretences in the place
of them. There was no leadership in England. In the lucid darkness he knew that
with a terrible certitude. He had a horrible vision of things disastrously
muffled; of Lady Frensham and her Morning Post friends first garrulously
and maliciously "patriotic," screaming her way with incalculable mischiefs
through the storm, and finally discovering that the Germans were the real
aristocrats and organising our national capitulation on that understanding. He
knew from talk he had heard that the navy was weak in mines and torpedoes,
unprovided with the great monitors needed for a war with Germany; torn by
doctrinaire feuds; nevertheless the sea power was our only defence. In the whole
country we might muster a military miscellany of perhaps three hundred thousand
men. And he had no faith in their equipment, in their direction. General French,
the one man who had his entire confidence, had been forced to resign through
some lawyer's misunderstanding about the Irish difficulty. He did not believe
any plans existed for such a war as Germany might force upon us, any
calculation, any foresight of the thing at all.
Why had we no foresight? Why had we this wilful blindness to disagreeable
possibilities? Why did we lie so open to the unexpected
crisis? Just what he said of himself he said also of his country. It was curious
to remember that. To realise how closely Dower House could play the microcosm to
the whole Empire....
It became relevant to the trend of his thoughts that his son had through his
mother a strong strain of the dark Irish in his composition.
How we had wasted Ireland! The rich values that lay in Ireland, the gallantry
and gifts, the possible friendliness, all these things were being left to the
Ulster politicians and the Tory women to poison and spoil, just as we left India
to the traditions of the chattering army women and the repressive instincts of
our mandarins. We were too lazy, we were too negligent. We passed our indolent
days leaving everything to somebody else. Was this the incurable British, just
as it was the incurable Britling, quality?
Was the whole prosperity of the British, the far-flung empire, the
securities, the busy order, just their good luck? It was a question he had asked
a hundred times of his national as of his personal self. No doubt luck had
favoured him. He was prosperous, and he was still only at the livelier end of
middle age. But was there not also a personal factor, a meritorious factor? Luck
had favoured the British with a well-placed island, a hardening climate,
accessible minerals, but then too was there not also a national virtue? Once he
had believed in that, in a certain gallantry, a noble levity, an underlying
sound sense. The last ten years of politics had made him doubt that profoundly.
He clung to it still, but without confidence. In the night that dear persuasion
left him altogether.... As for himself he had a certain brightness and
liveliness of mind, but the year of his fellowship had been a soft year, he had
got on to The Times through something very like a misapprehension, and it
was the chances of a dinner and a duchess that had given him the opportunity of
the Kahn show. He'd dropped into good things that suited
him. That at any rate was the essence of it. And these lucky chances had been no
incentive to further effort. Because things had gone easily and rapidly with him
he had developed indolence into a philosophy. Here he was just over forty, and
explaining to the world, explaining all through the week-end to this
American—until even God could endure it no longer and the smash stopped him—how
excellent was the backwardness of Essex and English go-as-you-please, and how
through good temper it made in some mysterious way for all that was desirable. A
fat English doctrine. Punch has preached it for forty years.
But this wasn't what he had always been. He thought of the strenuous
intentions of his youth, before he had got into this turmoil of amorous
experiences, while he was still out there with the clean star of youth. As Hugh
was....
In those days he had had no amiable doctrine of compromise. He had truckled
to no "domesticated God," but talked of the "pitiless truth"; he had tolerated
no easygoing pseudo-aristocratic social system, but dreamt of such a democracy
"mewing its mighty youth" as the world had never seen. He had thought that his
brains were to do their share in building up this great national imago,
winged, divine, out of the clumsy, crawling, snobbish, comfort-loving
caterpillar of Victorian England. With such dreams his life had started, and the
light of them, perhaps, had helped him to his rapid success. And then his wife
had died, and he had married again and become somehow more interested in his
income, and then the rather expensive first of the eight experiences had drained
off so much of his imaginative energy, and the second had drained off so much,
and there had been quarrels and feuds, and the way had been lost, and the days
had passed. He hadn't failed. Indeed he counted as a success among his
generation. He alone, in the night watches, could gauge the quality of that
success. He was widely known, reputably known; he
prospered. Much had come, oh! by a mysterious luck, but everything was doomed by
his invincible defects. Beneath that hollow, enviable show there ached waste.
Waste, waste, waste—his heart, his imagination, his wife, his son, his
country—his automobile....
Then there flashed into his mind a last straw of disagreeable
realisation.
He hadn't as yet insured his automobile! He had meant to do so. The papers
were on his writing-desk.
§ 7
On these black nights, when the personal Mr. Britling would lie awake
thinking how unsatisfactorily Mr. Britling was going on, and when the impersonal
Mr. Britling would be thinking how unsatisfactorily his universe was going on,
the whole mental process had a likeness to some complex piece of orchestral
music wherein the organ deplored the melancholy destinies of the race while the
piccolo lamented the secret trouble of Mrs. Harrowdean; the big drum thundered
at the Irish politicians, and all the violins bewailed the intellectual laxity
of the university system. Meanwhile the trumpets prophesied wars and disasters,
the cymbals ever and again inserted a clashing jar about the fatal delay in the
automobile insurance, while the triangle broke into a plangent solo on the topic
of a certain rotten gate-post he always forgot in the daytime, and how in
consequence the cows from the glebe farm got into the garden and ate Mrs.
Britling's carnations.
Time after time he had promised to see to that gatepost....
The organ motif battled its way to complete predominance. The lesser
themes were drowned or absorbed. Mr. Britling returned from the rôle of an
incompetent automobilist to the rôle of a soul naked in space and time wrestling
with giant questions. These cosmic solicitudes, it may be,
are the last penalty of irreligion. Was Huxley right, and was all humanity, even
as Mr. Britling, a careless, fitful thing, playing a tragically hopeless game,
thinking too slightly, moving too quickly, against a relentless antagonist?
Or is the whole thing just witless, accidentally cruel perhaps, but not
malignant? Or is it wise, and merely refusing to pamper us? Is there somewhere
in the immensities some responsive kindliness, some faint hope of toleration and
assistance, something sensibly on our side against death and mechanical cruelty?
If so, it certainly refuses to pamper us.... But if the whole thing is cruel,
perhaps also it is witless and will-less? One cannot imagine the ruler of
everything a devil—that would be silly. So if at the worst it is inanimate then
anyhow we have our poor wills and our poor wits to pit against it. And
manifestly then, the good of life, the significance of any life that is not mere
receptivity, lies in the disciplined and clarified will and the sharpened and
tempered mind. And what for the last twenty years—for all his lectures and
writings—had he been doing to marshal the will and harden the mind which were
his weapons against the Dark? He was ready enough to blame others—dons,
politicians, public apathy, but what was he himself doing?
What was he doing now?
Lying in bed!
His son was drifting to ruin, his country was going to the devil, the house
was a hospital of people wounded by his carelessness, the country roads choked
with his smashed (and uninsured) automobiles, the cows were probably lined up
along the borders and munching Edith's carnations at this very moment, his
pocketbook and bureau were stuffed with venomous insults about her—and he was
just lying in bed!
Suddenly Mr. Britling threw back his bedclothes and felt for the matches on
his bedside table.
Indeed this was by no means the first time that his brain had become a whirring torment in his skull. Previous
experiences had led to the most careful provision for exactly such states. Over
the end of the bed hung a light, warm pyjama suit of llama-wool, and at the feet
of it were two tall boots of the same material that buckled to the middle of his
calf. So protected, Mr. Britling proceeded to make himself tea. A Primus stove
stood ready inside the fender of his fireplace, and on it was a brightly
polished brass kettle filled with water; a little table carried a tea-caddy, a
tea-pot, a lemon and a glass. Mr. Britling lit the stove and then strolled to
his desk. He was going to write certain "Plain Words about Ireland." He lit his
study lamp and meditated beside it until a sound of water boiling called him to
his tea-making.
He returned to his desk stirring the lemon in his glass of tea. He would
write the plain common sense of this Irish situation. He would put things so
plainly that this squabbling folly would have to cease. It should be done
austerely, with a sort of ironical directness. There should be no abuse, no
bitterness, only a deep passion of sanity.
What is the good of grieving over a smashed automobile?
He sipped his tea and made a few notes on his writing pad. His face in the
light of his shaded reading lamp had lost its distraught expression, his hand
fingered his familiar fountain pen....
§ 8
The next morning Mr. Britling came into Mr. Direck's room. He was pink from
his morning bath, he was wearing a cheerful green-and-blue silk dressing gown,
he had shaved already, he showed no trace of his nocturnal vigil. In the
bathroom he had whistled like a bird. "Had a good night?" he said. "That's
famous. So did I. And the wrist and arm didn't even ache enough to keep you
awake?"
"I thought I heard you talking and walking about," said Mr. Direck.
"I got up for a little bit and worked. I often do that. I hope I didn't
disturb you. Just for an hour or so. It's so delightfully quiet in the
night...."
He went to the window and blinked at the garden outside. His two younger sons
appeared on their bicycles returning from some early expedition. He waved a hand
of greeting. It was one of those summer mornings when attenuated mist seems to
fill the very air with sunshine dust.
"This is the sunniest morning bedroom in the house," he said. "It's
south-east."
The sunlight slashed into the masses of the blue cedar outside with a score
of golden spears.
"The Dayspring from on High," he said.... "I thought of rather a useful
pamphlet in the night.
"I've been thinking about your luggage at that hotel," he went on, turning to
his guest again. "You'll have to write and get it packed up and sent down
here—
"No," he said, "we won't let you go until you can hit out with that arm and
fell a man. Listen!"
Mr. Direck could not distinguish any definite sound.
"The smell of frying rashers, I mean," said Mr. Britling. "It's the clarion
of the morn in every proper English home....
"You'd like a rasher, coffee?
"It's good to work in the night, and it's good to wake in the morning," said
Mr. Britling, rubbing his hands together. "I suppose I wrote nearly two thousand
words. So quiet one is, so concentrated. And as soon as I have had my breakfast
I shall go on with it again."