Chap. I
MARY MAKEBELIEVE lived with her mother in a small room at the
very top of a big, dingy house in a Dublin back street. As long
as she could remember she had lived in that top back room. She
knew every crack in the ceiling, and they were numerous and of
strange shapes. Every spot of mildew on the ancient wall-paper
was familiar. She had, indeed, watched the growth of most from
a greyish shade to a dark stain, from a spot to a great blob,
and the holes in the skirting of the walls, out of which at night
time the cockroaches came rattling, she knew also. There was but
one window in the room, and when she wished to look out of it
she had to push the window up, because the grime of many years
had so encrusted the glass that it was of no more than the demi-semi-transparency
[1] of thin horn. When she did look there was nothing to see but
a bulky array of chimney-pots crowning a next-door house, and
these continually hurled jays of soot against her window; therefore,
she did not care to look out often, for each time that she did
so she was forced to wash herself, and as water had to be carried
from the very bottom of the five-story house up hundreds and hundreds
of stairs to her room, she disliked having to use too much water.
Her mother seldom washed at all. She held that washing was
very unhealthy and took the natural gloss off the face, and that,
moreover, soap either tightened the skin or made it wrinkle. Her
own face was very tight in some places and very loose in others,
and Mary Makebelieve often thought that the tight places were
spots which her mother used to wash when she was young, and the
loose parts were those which had never been washed at all. She
thought that she would prefer to be either loose all over her
face or tight all over it, and, therefore, when she washed she
did it thoroughly, and when she abstained she allowed of no compromise.
Her mothers face was the colour of old, [2] old ivory.
Her nose was like a great strong beak, and on it the skin was
stretched very tightly, so that her nose shone dully when the
candle was lit. Her eyes were big and as black as pools of ink
and as bright as the eyes of a bird. Her hair also was black,
it was as smooth as the finest silk, and when unloosened it hung
straightly down, shining about her ivory face. Her lips were thin
and scarcely coloured at all, and her hands were sharp, quick
hands, seeming all knuckle when she closed them and all fingers
when they were opened again.
Mary Makebelieve loved her mother very dearly, and her mother
returned her affection with an overwhelming passion that sometimes
surged into physically painful caresses. When her mother hugged
her for any length of time she soon wept, rocking herself and
her daughter to and fro, and her clutch became then so frantic
that poor Mary Makebelieve found it difficult to draw her breath;
but she would not for the world have disturbed the career of her
mothers love. Indeed, she found some pleasure in the fierceness
of those caresses, and welcomed the pain far more than she reprobated
[3] it.
Her mother went out early every morning to work, and seldom
returned home until late at night. She was a charwoman, and her
work was to scrub out rooms and wash down staircases. She also
did cooking when she was asked, and needlework when she got any
to do. She had made exquisite dresses which were worn by beautiful
young girls at balls and picnics, and fine white shirts that great
gentlemen wore when they were dining, and fanciful waistcoats
for gay young men, and silk stockings for dancing in - but that
was a long time ago, because these beautiful things used to make
her very angry when they were taken from her, so that she cursed
the people who came to take them away, and sometimes tore up the
dresses and danced on them and screamed.
She used often to cry because she was not rich. Sometimes,
when she came home from work, she liked to pretend that she was
rich; she would play at imagining that some one had died and left
her a great fortune, or that her brother Patrick had come back
from America with vast wealth, and then she would tell Mary Makebelieve
of the things she intended to buy and do the very next day. [4]
Mary Makebelieve liked that ... They were to move the first thing
in the morning to a big house with a garden behind it full of
fruit-trees and flowers and birds. There would be a wide lawn
in front of the house to play lawn-tennis in, and to walk with
delicately fine young men with fair faces and white hands, who
would speak in the French language and bow often with their hats
almost touching the ground. There were to be twelve servants -
six of them men servants and six of them women servants - who
would instantly do as they were bidden, and would receive ten
shillings each per week and their board; they would also have
two nights free in the week, and would be very well fed. There
were many wonderful dresses to be bought, dresses for walking
in the streets and dresses for driving in a carriage, and others
again for riding on horseback and for travelling in. There was
a dress of crimson silk with a deep lace collar, and a heavy,
wine-coloured satin dress with a gold chain falling down in front
of it, and there was a pretty white dress of the finest linen,
having one red rose pinned at the waist. There were black silken
stockings with quaint designs worked on them in red silk, and
scarves of silver gauze, and others embroidered with flowers and
little shapes of men and women.
When her mother was planning all these things she was very
happy, but afterwards she used to cry bitterly and rock her daughter
to and fro on her breast until she hurt her. [6]
Chap. II
EVERY MORNING about six oclock Mary Makebelieve left her
bed and lit the fire. It was an ugly fire to light, because the
chimney had never been swept, and there was no draught. Also,
they never had any sticks in the house, and scraps of paper twisted
tightly into balls with the last nights cinders placed on
them and a handful of small coals strewn on the top were used
instead. Sometimes the fire blazed up quickly, and that made her
happy, but at other times it went out three and four, and often
half a dozen times; then the little bottle of paraffin oil had
to be squandered - a few rags well steeped in the oil with a newspaper
stretched over the grate seldom failed to coax enough fire to
boil the saucepan of water; generally this method smoked the water,
and then the tea [7] tasted so so horrid that one only drank it
for the sake of economy.
Mrs. Makebelieve liked to lie in bed until the last possible
moment. As there was no table in the room, Mary used to bring
the two cups of tea, the tin of condensed milk, and the quarter
of a loaf over to the bed, and there she and her mother took their
breakfast.
From the time she opened her eyes in the morning her mother
never ceased to talk. It was then she went over all the things
that had happened on the previous day, and enumerated the places
she would have to go to on the present day, and the chances for
and against the making of a little money. At this meal she used
to arrange also to have the room re-papered and the chimney swept
and the rat-holes stopped up - there were three of these; one
was on the left-hand side of the fire grate, the other two were
under the bed, and Mary Makebelieve had lain awake many a night
listening to the gnawing of teeth on the skirting and the scamper
of little feet here and there on the floor. Her mother further
arranged to have a Turkey carpet placed on the floor, although
she admitted that oilcloth [8] or linoleum was easier to clean,
but they were not so nice to the feet or the eye. Into all these
improvements her daughter entered with the greatest delight. There
was to be a red mahogany chest of drawers against one wall, and
a rosewood piano against the wall opposite; a fender of shining
brass, with brazen furniture, a bright copper kettle for boiling
water in, and an iron pot for cooking potatoes and meat; there
was to be a life-sized picture of Mary over the mantelpiece, and
a picture of her mother near the window in a golden frame, also
a picture of a Newfoundland dog lying in a barrel and a little
wee terrier crawling up to make friends with him, and a picture
of a battle between black people and soldiers.
Her mother knew it was time to get out of bed when she heard
a heavy step coming from the next room and going downstairs. A
labouring man lived there with his wife and six children. When
the door banged she jumped up, dressed quickly, and flew from
the room in a panic of haste. Usually then, as there was nothing
to do, Mary went back to bed for another couple of hours. After
this she arose, made the bed and tidied the [9] room, and went
out to walk in the streets, or to sit in the St. Stephens
Green Park. She knew every bird in the Park, those that had chickens,
and those that had had chickens, and those that never had any
chickens at all - these latter were usually drakes, and had reason
on their side for an abstention which might otherwise have appeared
remarkable, but they did not deserve the pity which Mary lavished
on their childishness, nor the extra pieces of bread with which
she sought to recompense them. She loved to watch the ducklings
swimming after their mothers: they were quite fearless, and would
dash to the waters edge where one was standing and pick
up nothing with the greatest eagerness and swallow it with delight.
The mother duck swam placidly close to her brood, and clucked
in a low voice all kinds of warnings and advice and reproof to
the little ones. Mary Makebelieve thought it was very clever of
the little ducklings to be able to swim so well. She loved them,
and when nobody was looking she used to cluck at them like their
mother; but she did not often do this, because she did not know
duck language really well, and feared that her cluck might mean
the wrong things, and that she [10] might be giving these innocents
bad advice, and telling them to do something contrary to what
their mother had just directed.
The bridge across the big lake was a fascinating place.
On the sunny side lots of ducks were always standing on their
heads searching for something in the water, so that they looked
like only half ducks. On the shady side hundreds of eels were
swimming about - they were most wonderful things; some of them
were thin like ribbons, and others were round and plump like thick
ropes. They never seemed to fight at all, and although the ducklings
were so tiny the big eels never touched any of them, even when
they dived right down amongst them. Some of the eels swam along
very slowly, looking on this side and on that as if they were
out of work or up from the country, and others whizzed by with
incredible swiftness. Mary Makebelieve thought that the latter
kind had just heard their babies crying; she wondered, when a
little fish cried, could its mother see the tears where there
was already so much water about, and then she thought that maybe
they cried hard lumps of something that was easily visible.
After this she would go around the flower-beds and look
at each; some of them were shaped like stars, and some were quite
round, and others again were square. She liked the star-shaped
flower-beds best, and next she liked the round ones, and last
of all the square. But she loved all the flowers, and used to
make up stories about them.
After that, growing hungry, she would go home for her lunch.
She went home down Grafton Street and OConnell Street. She
always went along the right-hand side of the street going home,
and looked in every shop window that she passed; and then, when
she had eaten her lunch, she came out again and walked along the
left-hand side of the road, looking at the shops on that side;
and so she knew daily everything that was new in the city, and
was able to tell her mother at night time that the black dress
with Spanish lace was taken out of Mannings window, and
a red gown with tucks at the shoulders and Irish lace at the wrists
put in its place; or that the diamond ring in Johnsons marked
One Hundred Pounds was gone from the case, and that a slide of
brooches of beaten silver and blue enamel was there instead. [12]
In the night time her mother and herself went round to each
of the theatres in turn and watched the people going in, and looked
at the big posters. When they went home afterwards they had supper,
and used to try to make out the plots of the various plays from
the pictures they had seen, so that generally they had lots to
talk about before they went to bed. Mary Makebelieve used to talk
most in the night time, but her mother talked most in the morning.
[13]
Chap. III
HER MOTHER spoke sometimes of matrimony as a thing remote but
very certain: the remoteness of this adventure rather shocked
Mary Makebelieve; she knew that a girl had to get married, that
a strange, beautiful man would come from somewhere looking for
a wife, and would retire again with his bride to that Somewhere
which is the country of Romance. At times (and she could easily
picture it) he rode in armour on a great bay horse, the plume
of his helmet trailing among the high leaves of the forest. Or
he came standing on the prow of a swift ship with the sunlight
blazing back from his golden armour. Or on a grassy plain, fleet
as the wind, he came running, leaping, laughing.
When the subject of matrimony was under discussion her mother
planned minutely [14] the person of the groom, his vast accomplishments,
and yet vaster wealth, the magnificence of his person, and the
love in which he was held by rich and poor alike. She also discussed,
down to the smallest detail, the elaborate trousseau she would
provide for her daughter, the extravagant presents the bridegroom
would make to his bride and her maids, and those, yet more costly,
which the bridegrooms family would send to the newly-married
pair. All these wonders could only concentrate in the person of
a lord. Mary Makebelieves questions as to the status and
appurtenances of a lord were searching and minute; her mothers
rejoinders were equally elaborate and particular.
At his birth a lord is cradled in silver; at his death he
is laid in a golden casket, an oaken coffin, and a leaden outer
coffin, until, finally, a massy stone sarcophagus shrouds his
remains for ever. His life is a whirl of gaiety and freedom. Around
his castle there spread miles upon miles of sunny grass lands
and ripened orchards and waving forests, and through these he
hunts with his laughing companions or walks gently with his lady.
He has servants by the thousand, each anxious [15] to die for
him, and his wealth, prodigious beyond the computation of avarice,
is stored in underground chambers, whose low, tortuous passages
lead to labyrinths of vaults massy and impregnable.
Mary Makebelieve would have loved to wed a lord. If a lord
had come to her when she paced softly through a forest, or stood
alone on the seashore, or crouched among the long grass of a windy
plain, she would have placed her hands in his and followed him
and loved him truly for ever. But she did not believe that these
things happened nowadays, nor did her mother. Nowadays! her mother
looked on these paltry times with an eye whose scorn was complicated
by fury. Mean, ugly days! mean, ugly lives! and mean, ugly people!
said her mother, thats all one can get nowadays; and then
she spoke of the people whose houses she washed out and whose
staircases she scrubbed down, and her old-ivory face flamed from
her black hair, and her deep, dark eyes whirled and became hard
and motionless as points of jet, and her hands jumped alternately
into knuckles and claws.
But it became increasingly evident to [16] Mary Makebelieve
that marriage was not a story but a fact, and, somehow, the romance
of it did not drift away, although the very house wherein she
lived was infested by these conjoints, and the streets wherein
she walked were crowded with undistinguished couples ... Those grey
- lived, dreary - natured people had a spark of fire smouldering
somewhere in their poor economy. Six feet deep is scarcely deep
enough to bury romance, and until that depth of clay has clogged
our bones the fire can still smoulder and be fanned, and, perhaps,
blaze up and flare across a county or a country to warm the cold
hands of many a shrivelled person.
How did all these people come together? She did not yet
understand the basic necessity that drives the male to the female.
Sex was not yet to her a physiological distinction, it was only
a differentiation of clothing, a matter of whiskers and no whiskers:
but she had begun to take a new and peculiar interest in men.
One of these hurrying or loitering strangers might be the husband
whom fate had ordained for her. She would scarcely have been surprised
if one of the men who looked at her casually in the street had
[17] suddenly halted and asked her to marry him. It came on her
with something like assurance that that was the only business
these men were there for; she could not discover any other reason
or excuse for their existence, and if some man had been thus adventurous
Mary Make-believe would have been sadly perplexed to find an answer:
she might, indeed, have replied, Yes, thank you, sir,
for when a man asks one to do a thing for him one does it gladly.
There was an attraction about young men which she could not understand,
something peculiarly dear and magnetic; she would have liked to
shake hands with one to see how different he felt from a girl.
They would, probably, shake hands quite hard and then hit one.
She fancied she would not mind being hit by a man, and then, watching
the vigour of their movements, she thought they could hit very
hard, but still there was a terrible attraction about the idea
of being hit by a man. She asked her mother (with apparent irrelevance),
had a man ever struck her? Her mother was silent for a few moments,
and then burst into so violent a passion of weeping that Mary
Makebelieve was frightened. She rushed into her mothers
[18] arms, and was rocked fiercely against a heart almost bursting
with bitter pride and recollection. But her mother did not then,
nor did she ever afterwards, answer Mary Make-believes question.
[19]
Chap. IV
EVERY AFTERNOON a troop of policemen marched in solemn and majestic
single file from the College Green Police Station. At regular
intervals, one by one, a policeman stepped sideways from the file,
adjusted his belt, touched his moustache, looked up the street
and down the street for stray criminals, and condescended to the
duties of his beat.
At the crossing where Nassau and Suffolk Streets intersect
Grafton Street one of these superb creatures was wont to relinquish
his companions, and there in the centre of the road, a monument
of solidity and law, he remained until the evening hour which
released him again to the companionship of his peers.
Perhaps this point is the most interesting place in Dublin.
Upon one vista Grafton Street with its glittering shops stretches,
or [20] rather winds, to the St. Stephens Green Park, terminating
at the gate known as the Fusiliers Arch, but which local
patriotism has rechristened the Traitors Gate. On the left
Nassau Street, broad and clean, and a trifle vulgar and bourgeois
in its openness, runs away to Merrion Square, and on with a broad
ease to Blackrock and Kingstown and the sea. On the right hand
Suffolk Street, reserved and shy, twists up to St. Andrews
Church, touches gingerly the South City Markets, droops to Georges
Street, and is lost in mean and dingy intersections. At the back
of the crossing Grafton Street continues again for a little distance
down to Trinity College (at the gates whereof very intelligent
young men flaunt very tattered gowns and smoke massive pipes with
great skill for their years), skirting the Bank of Ireland, and
on to the river Liffey and the street which local patriotism defiantly
speaks of as OConnell Street, and alien patriotism, with
equal defiance and pertinacity, knows as Sackville Street.
To the point where these places meet, and where the policeman
stands, all the traffic of Dublin converges in a constant stream.
The trams hurrying to Terenure, or Donnybrook, [21] or Dalkey
flash around this corner; the doctors, who, in these degenerate
days, concentrate in Merrion Square, fly up here in carriages
and motor-cars; the vans of the great firms in Grafton and OConnell
Streets, or those outlying, never cease their exuberant progress.
The ladies and gentlemen of leisure stroll here daily at four
oclock, and from all sides the vehicles and pedestrians,
the bicycles and motor bicycles, the trams and the outside cars
rush to the solitary policeman, who directs them all with his
severe but tolerant eye. He knows all the tram-drivers who go
by, and his nicely graduated wink rewards the glances of the rubicund,
jolly drivers of the hackneys and the decayed jehus with purple
faces and dismal hopefulness who drive sepulchral cabs for some
reason which has no acquaintance with profit; nor are the ladies
and gentlemen who saunter past foreign to his encyclopedic eye.
Constantly his great head swings a slow recognition, constantly
his serene finger motions onwards a well-known undesirable, and
his big white teeth flash for an instant at young, laughing girls
and the more matronly acquaintances who solicit the distinction
of his glance. [22]
To this place, and about this hour, Mary Makebelieve, returning
from her solitary lunch, was wont to come. The figure of the massive
policeman fascinated her. Surely everything desirable in manhood
was concentrated in his tremendous body. What an immense, shattering
blow that mighty fist could give! She could imagine it swinging
vast as the buffet of an hero, high-thrown and then down irresistibly
- a crashing, monumental hand. She delighted in his great, solid
head as it swung slowly from side to side, and his calm, proud
eye - a governing, compelling, and determined eye. She had never
met his glance yet: she withered away before it as a mouse withers
and shrinks and falls to its den before a cats huge glare.
She used to look at him from the kerbstone in front of the chemists
shop, or on the opposite side of the road, while pretending to
wait for a tram; and at the pillar-box beside the opticians
she found time for one furtive twinkle of a glance that shivered
to his face and trembled away into the traffic. She did not think
he noticed her; but there was nothing he did not notice. His business
was noticing: he caught her in his mental [23] policemans
notebook the very first day she came; he saw her each day beside,
and at last looked for her coming and enjoyed her strategy. One
day her shy, creeping glance was caught by his; it held her mesmerised
for a few seconds; it looked down into her - for a moment the
whole world seemed to have become one immense eye - she could
scarcely get away from it.
When she remembered again she was standing by the pond in
the St. Stephens Green Park, with a queer, frightened exaltation
lightening through her blood. She did not go home that night by
Grafton Street - she did not dare venture within reach of that
powerful organism - but went a long way round, and still the way
seemed very short.
That night her mother, although very tired, was the more
talkative of the two. She offered in exchange for her daughters
thoughts pennies that only existed in her imagination. Mary Makebelieve
professed that it was sleep and not thought obsessed her, and
exhibited voucher yawns which were as fictitious as her reply.
When they went to bed that night it was a long time before [24]
she slept. She lay looking into the deep gloom of the chamber,
and scarcely heard the fierce dreams of her mother, who was demanding
from a sleep world the things she lacked in the wide-awake one.
[25]
Chap. V
THIS IS the appearance was on Mary Makebelieve at that time: -
She had fair hair, and it was very soft and very thick; when she
unwound this it fell, or rather flowed, down to her waist, and
when she walked about the room with her hair unloosened it curved
beautifully about her head, snuggled into the hollow of her neck,
ruffled out broadly again upon her shoulders, and swung into and
out of her figure with every motion, surging and shrinking and
dancing; the ends of her hair were soft and loose as foam, and
it had the colour and shining of pure, light gold. Commonly in
the house she wore her hair loose, because her mother liked the
appearance of youth imparted by hanging hair, and would often
desire her daughter to leave off her outer skirt and walk only
in her petticoats [26] to heighten the illusion of girlishness.
Her head was shaped very tenderly and softly; it was so small
that when her hair was twisted up it seemed much too delicate
to bear so great a burden. Her eyes were grey, limpidly tender
and shy, drooping under weighty lids, so that they seldom seemed
more than half opened, and commonly sought the ground rather than
the bolder excursions of straightforwardness; they seldom looked
for longer than a glance, climbing and poising and eddying about
the person at whom she gazed, and then dived away again; and always
when she looked at any one she smiled a deprecation of her boldness.
She had a small white face, very like her mothers in some
ways and at some angles, but the tight beak which was her mothers
nose was absent in Mary; her nose withdrew timidly in the centre,
and only snatched a hurried courage to become visible at the tip.
It was a nose which seemed to have been snubbed almost out of
existence. Her mother loved it because it was so little, and had
tried so hard not to be a nose at all. They often stood together
before the little glass that had a great crack running drunkenly
from the right-hand top [27] corner down to the left-hand bottom
corner, and two small arm crosses, one a little above the other,
in the centre. When ones face looked into this glass it
often appeared there as four faces with horrible aberrations;
an ear might be curving around a lip, or an eye leering strangely
in the middle of a chin. But there were ways of looking into the
glass which practice had discovered, and usage had long ago dulled
the terrors of its vagaries. Looking into this glass, Mrs. Makebelieve
would comment minutely upon the two faces therein, and, pointing
to her own triumphantly genuine nose and the fact that her husbands
nose had been of quite discernible proportions, she would seek
in labyrinths of pedigree for a reason to justify her daughters
lack; she passed all her sisters in this review, with an army
of aunts and great-aunts, rifling the tombs of grandparents and
their remoter blood, and making long-dead noses to live again.
Mary Makebelieve used to lift her timidly curious eye and smile
in deprecation of her nasal shortcomings, and then her mother
would kiss the dejected button and vow it was the dearest, loveliest
bit of a nose that had ever been seen. [28]
Big noses suit some people, said Mrs. Makebelieve,
but they do not suit others, and one would not suit you,
dearie. They go well with black-haired people and very tall people,
military gentlemen, judges and apothecaries; but small, fair folk
cannot support great noses. I like my own nose, she continued.
At school, when I was a little girl, the other girls used
to laugh at my nose, but I always liked it, and after a time other
people came to like it also.
Mary Makebelieve had small, slim hands and feet: the palms
of her hands were softer than anything in the world; there were
five little, pink cushions on her palm - beginning at the little
finger there was a very tiny cushion, the next one was bigger,
and the next bigger again, until the largest ended a perfect harmony
at the base of her thumb. Her mother used to kiss these little
cushions at times, holding back the finger belonging to each,
and naming it as she touched it. These are the names of Mary Makebelieves
fingers, beginning with the thumb: - Tom Tumkins, Willie Winkles,
Long Daniel, Bessie Bobtail, and Little Dick-Dick.
Her slight, girlish figure was only beginning [29] to creep
to the deeper contours of womanhood, a half curve here and there,
a sudden softness in the youthful lines, certain angles trembling
on the slightest of rolls, a hint, a suggestion, the shadowy prophecy
of circles and half hoops that could not yet roll: the trip of
her movements was troubled sometimes to a sedater motion.
These things her mothers curiosity was continually
recording, sometimes with happy pride, but oftener in a kind of
anger to find that her little girl was becoming a big girl. If
it had been possible she would have detained her daughter for
ever in the physique of a child; she feared the time when Mary
would become too evidently a woman, when all kinds of equalities
would come to hinder her spontaneous and active affection. A woman
might object to be nursed, while a girl would not; Mrs. Makebelieve
feared that objection, and, indeed, Mary, under the stimulus of
an awakening body and a new, strange warmth, was not altogether
satisfied by being nursed or by being the passive participant
in these caresses. She sometimes thought that she would like to
take her mother on her own breast and rock her to [30] and fro,
crooning soft made-up words and kissing the top of a head or the
half-hidden curve of a cheek, but she did not dare to do so for
fear her mother would strike her. Her mother was very jealous
on that point; she loved her daughter to kiss her and stroke her
hands and her face, but she never liked her to play [31] at being
the mother, nor had she ever encouraged her daughter in the occupations
of a doll. She was the mother and Mary was the baby, and she could
not bear to have her motherhood hindered even in play.
Chap. VI
ALTHOUGH MARY Makebelieve was sixteen years of age she had not
yet gone to work; her mother did not like the idea of her little
girl stooping to the drudgery of the only employment she could
have aided her to obtain - that was, to assist herself in the
humble and arduous toil of charing. She had arranged that Mary
was to go into a shop, a drapery store, or some such other, but
that was to be in a sometime which seemed infinitely remote. And
then, too, said Mrs. Makebelieve, all kinds of things
may happen in a year or so if we wait. Your uncle Patrick, who
went to America twenty years ago, may come home, and when he does
you will not have to work, dearie, nor will I. Or again, some
one going along the street may take a fancy to you and marry you;
things often [32] happen like that. There were a thousand
schemes and accidents which, in her opinion, might occur to the
establishment of her daughters ease and the enlargement
of her own dignity. And so Mary Makebelieve, when her mother was
at work (which was sometimes every day in the week), had all the
day to loiter in and spend as best she liked. Sometimes she did
not go out at all. She stayed in the top back room sewing or knitting,
mending holes in the sheets or the blankets, or reading books
from the Free Library in Capel Street: but generally she preferred,
after the few hours which served to put the room in order, to
go out and walk along the streets, taking new turnings as often
as she fancied, and striking down strange roads to see the shops
and the people.
There were so many people whom she knew by sight; almost
daily she saw these somewhere, and she often followed them for
a short distance, with a feeling of friendship; for the loneliness
of the long day often drew down upon her like a weight, so that
even the distant companionship of these remembered faces that
did not know her was comforting. [33]
She wished she could find out who some of them were. - There
was a tall man with a sweeping brown beard, whose heavy overcoat
looked as though it had been put on with a shovel; he wore spectacles,
and his eyes were blue, and always seemed as if they were going
to laugh; he, also, looked into the shops as he went along, and
he seemed to know everybody. Every few paces people would halt
and shake his hand, but these people never spoke, because the
big man with the brown beard would instantly burst into a fury
of speech which had no intervals; and when there was no one with
him at all he would talk to himself. On these occasions he did
not see any one, and people had to jump out of his way while he
strode onwards swinging his big head from one side to the other,
and with his eyes fixed on some place a great distance away. Once
or twice, in passing, she heard him singing to himself the most
lugubrious song in the world. There was another - a long, thin,
black man - who looked young and was always smiling secretly to
himself; his lips were never still for a moment, and, passing
Mary Makebelieve a few times, she heard him buzzing like a great
[34] bee. He did not stop to shake hands with any one, and although
many people saluted him he took no heed, but strode on, smiling
his secret smile and buzzing serenely. There was a third man whom
she often noticed: his clothing seemed as if it had been put on
him a long time ago and had never been taken off again. He had
a long, pale face, with a dark moustache drooping over a most
beautiful mouth. His eyes were very big and lazy, and did not
look quite human; they had a trick of looking sidewards - a most
intimate, personal look. Sometimes he saw nothing in the world
but the pavement, and at other times he saw everything. He looked
at Mary Makebelieve once, and she got a fright; she had a queer
idea that she had known him well hundreds of years before, and
that he remembered her also. She was afraid of that man, but she
liked him because he looked so gentle and so - there was something
else he looked which as yet she could not put a name to, but which
her ancestry remembered dimly. There was a short, fair, pale-faced
man, who looked like the tiredest man in the world. He was often
preoccupied, but not in the singular way the others were. He [35]
seemed to be always chewing the cud of remembrance, and looked
at people as if they reminded him of other people who were dead
a long time and whom he thought of but did not regret. He was
a detached man even in a crowd, and carried with him a cold atmosphere;
even his smile was bleak and aloof. Mary Makebelieve noticed that
many people nudged each other as he went by, and then they would
turn and look after him and go away whispering.
These and many others she saw almost daily, and used to
look for with a feeling of friendship. At other times she walked
up the long line of quays sentinelling the Liffey, watching the
swift boats of Guinness puffing down the river, and the thousands
of sea-gulls hovering above or swimming on the dark waters, until
she came to the Phoenix Park, where there was always a cricket
or football match being played, or some young men or girls playing
hurley, or children playing tip-and-tig, running after one another,
and dancing and screaming in the sunshine. Her mother liked very
much to go with her to the Phoenix Park on days when there was
no work to be done. Leaving the great, [36] white main road, up
which the bicycles and motor-cars are continually whizzing, a
few minutes walk brings one to quiet alleys sheltered by
trees and groves of hawthorn. In these passages one can walk for
a long time without meeting a person, or lie on the grass in the
shadow of a tree and watch the sunlight beating down on the green
fields and shimmering between the trees. There is a deep silence
to be found here, very strange and beautiful to one fresh from
the city, and it is strange also to look about in the broad sunshine
and see no person near at all, and no movement saving the roll
and folding of the grass, the slow swinging of the branches of
the trees, or the noiseless flight of a bee, a butterfly, or a
bird.
These things Mary Makebelieve liked, but her mother would
pine for the dances of the little children, the gallant hurrying
of the motor-cars, and the movement to and fro of the people with
gay dresses and coloured parasols and all the circumstance of
holiday. [37]
Chap. VII
ONE MORNING Mary Makebelieve jumped out of bed and lit the fire.
For a wonder it lit easily: the match was scarcely applied when
the flames were leaping up the black chimney, and this made her
feel at ease with the world. Her mother stayed in bed chatting
with something more of gaiety than usual. It was nearly six oclock,
and the early summer sun was flooding against the grimy window.
The previous evenings post had brought a postcard for Mrs.
Makebelieve, requesting her to call on a Mrs. OConnor, who
had a house off Harcourt Street. This, of course, meant a days
work - it also meant a new client.
Mrs. Makebelieves clients were always new. She could
not remain for any length of time in peoples employment
without being troubled by the fact that these folk had [38] houses
of their own and were actually employing her in a menial capacity.
She sometimes looked at their black silk aprons in a way which
they never failed to observe with anger, and on their attempting
(as they always termed it) to put her in her proper place, she
would discuss their appearance and morals with such power that
they at once dismissed her from their employment and incited their
husbands to assault her.
Mrs. Makebelieves mind was exercised in finding out
who had recommended her to this new lady, and in what terms of
encomium such recommendation had been framed. She also debated
as to whether it would be wise to ask for one shilling and ninepence
per day instead of the customary one shilling and sixpence. If
the house was a big one she might be required by this new customer
oftener than once a week, and, perhaps, there were others in the
house besides the lady who would find small jobs for her to do
- needlework or messages, or some such which would bring in a
little extra money; for she professed her willingness and ability
to undertake with success any form of work in which a woman could
be eminent. In a house where she [39] had worked she had once
been asked by a gentleman who lodged there to order in two dozen
bottles of stout, and, on returning with the stout, the gentleman
had thanked her and given her a shilling. Incidents parallel to
this had kept her faith in humanity green. There must be plenty
of these open-handed gentlemen in houses such as she worked in,
and, perhaps, in Mrs. OConnors house there might be
more than one such person. There were stingy people enough, heaven
knew, people who would get one to run messages and almost expect
to be paid themselves for allowing one to work for them. Mrs.
Makebelieve anathematised such skinflints with a vocabulary which
was quite equal to the detailing of their misdeeds; but she refused
to dwell on them: they were not really important in a world where
the sun was shining. In the night time she would again believe
in their horrible existences, but until then the world must be
peopled with kindhearted folk. She instanced many whom she knew,
people who had advanced services and effects without exacting
or indeed expecting any return.
When the tea was balanced insecurely on [40] the bed, the
two tea-cups on one side of her legs, the three-quarters of a
loaf and the tin of condensed milk on the other, Mary sat down
with great care, and all through the breakfast her mother culled
from her capacious memory a list of kindnesses of which she had
been the recipient or the witness. Mary supplemented the recital
by incidents from her own observation. She had often seen a man
in the street give a penny to an old woman. She had often seen
old women give things to other old women. She knew many people
who never looked for the halfpenny change from a newsboy. Mrs.
Makebelieve applauded the justice of such transactions; they were,
she admitted, the things she would do herself if she were in a
position to be careless; but a person to whom the discovery of
her daily bread is a daily problem, and who can scarcely keep
pace with the ever-changing terms of the problem, is not in a
position to be careless. - Grind, grind, grind, said
Mrs. Makebelieve, that is life for me, and if I ceased to
grind for an instant .. she flickered her thin hand into a nowhere
of terror. Her attitude was, that when one had enough one should
give the [41] residue to some one who had not enough. It was her
woe, it stabbed her to the heart, to see desolate people dragging
through the streets, standing to glare through the windows of
bakeries and confectioners shops, and little children in
some of these helpless arms! Thinking of these, she said that
every morsel she ate would choke her were it not for her own hunger.
But maybe, said she, catching a providential glance of the golden-tinted
window, maybe these poor people were not as poor as they seemed:
surely they had ways of collecting a living which other people
did not know anything about. It might be that they got lots of
money from kind-hearted people, and food at hospitable doors,
and here and there clothing and oddments which, if they did not
wear, they knew how to dispose of advantageously. What extremes
of ways and means such people must be acquainted with! No ditch
was too low to rummage in, no rat-hole too hidden to be ravaged;
a gate represented something to be climbed over; an open door
was an invitation, a locked one a challenge. They could dodge
under the fences of the law and climb the barbed wire of morality
with equal [42] impunity, and the utmost rigour of punishment
had little terror for those whose hardships could scarcely be
artificially worsened. The stagger of despair, the stricken, helpless
aspect of such people, their gaunt faces and blurred eyes, might
conceivably be their stock-in-trade, the keys wherewith they unlocked
hearts and purses and area doors. It must be so when the sun was
shining and birds were singing across fields not immeasurably
distant, and children in walled gardens romped among fruits and
flowers. She would believe this, for it was the early morning
when one must believe, but when the night time came again she
would laugh to scorn such easy beliefs, she would see the lean
ribs of humanity when she undressed herself. [43]
Chap. VIII
AFTER HER MOTHER had gone, Mary Make-believe occupied herself
settling the room and performing the various offices which the
keeping in order of even one small room involves. There were pieces
of the wallpaper flapping loosely; these had to be gummed down
with strips of stamp-paper. The bed had to be made, the floor
scrubbed, and a miscellany of objects patted and tapped into order.
Her few dresses also had to be gone over for loose buttons, and
the darning of threadbare places was a duty exercising her constant
attention. Her clothing was always made by her mother, whose needle
had once been noted for expertness, and, therefore, fitted more
accurately than is customary in young girls dresses. The
arranging and rearranging of her beads was a frequent and [44]
enjoyable labour. She had four different necklaces, representing
four different pennyworths of beads purchased at a shop whose
merchandise was sold for one penny per item. One pennyworth of
these beads was coloured green, another red, a third was coloured
like pearls, and the fourth was a miscellaneous packet of many
colours. A judicious selection of these beads could always provide
a new and magnificent necklace at the expense of little more than
a half-hours easy work.
Because the sun was shining she brought out her white dress,
and for a time was busy on it. There had been five tucks in the
dress, but one after one they had to be let out. This was the
last tuck that remained, and it also had to go, but even with
such extra lengthening the dress would still swing free of her
ankles. Her mother had promised to add a false hem to it when
she got time, and Mary determined to remind her of this promise
as soon as she came in from work. She polished her shoes, put
on the white dress, and then did up her hair in front of the cracked
looking-glass. She always put up her hair very plainly. She first
combed it down straight, then parted it in the [45] centre, and
rolled it into a great ball at the back of her neck. She often
wished to curl her hair, and, indeed, it would have curled with
the lightest persuasion; but her mother, being approached on the
subject, said that curls were common and were seldom worn by respectable
people, excepting very small children or actresses, both of whose
slender mentalities were registered by these tiny daintinesses.
Also, curls took up too much time in arranging, and the slightest
moisture in the air was liable to draw them down into lank and
unsightly plasters, and, therefore, saving for a dance or a picnic,
curls should not be used.
Mary Makebelieve, having arranged her hair, hesitated for
some time in the choice of a necklace. There was the pearl-coloured
necklace - it was very pretty, but every one could tell at once
that they were not genuine pearls. Real pearls of the bigness
of these would be very valuable. Also, there was something childish
about pearls which latterly she wished to avoid. She had quite
grown up now. The letting down of the last tuck in her dress marked
an epoch as distinct as did the first rolling up of [46] her hair.
She wished her dress would go right down to her heels so that
she might have a valid reason for holding up her skirts with one
hand. She felt a trifle of impatience because her mother had delayed
making the false hem: she could have stitched it on herself if
her mother had cut it out, but for this day the dress would have
to do. She wished she owned a string of red coral; not that round
beady sort, but the jagged crisscross coral - a string of these
long enough to go twice round her neck, and yet hang down in front
to her waist. If she owned a string as long as that she might
be able to cut enough off to make a slender wristlet. She would
have loved to see such a wristlet sagging down to her hand.
Red, it seemed, would have to be the colour for this day,
so she took the red beads out of a box and put them on. They looked
very nice against her white dress, but still - she did not quite
like them they seemed too solid, so she put them back into the
box again, and instead tied round her neck a narrow ribbon of
black velvet, which satisfied her better. Next she put on her
hat; it was of straw, and had been washed many times. [47] There
was a broad ribbon of black velvet around it. She wished earnestly
that she had a sash of black velvet about three inches deep to
go round her waist. There was such a piece about the hem of her
mothers Sunday skirt, but, of course, that could not be
touched; maybe her mother would give it to her if she asked. The
skirt would look quite as well without it, and when her mother
knew how nice it looked round her waist she would certainly give
it to her.
She gave a last look at herself in the glass and went out,
turning up to the quays in the direction of the Phoenix Park.
The sun was shining gloriously, and the streets seemed wonderfully
clean in the sunlight. The horses under the heavy drays pulled
their loads as if they were not heavy. The big, red-faced drivers
leaned back at ease, with their hard hats pushed back from their
foreheads and their eyes puckered at the sunshine. The tram-cars
whizzed by like great jewels. The outside cars went spanking down
the broad road, and every jolly-faced jarvey winked at her as
he jolted by. The people going up and down the street seemed contented
and happy. It was one oclock, [48] and from all kinds of
offices and shops young men and women were darting forth for their
lunch; none of the young men were so hurried but they had a moment
to glance admiringly at Mary Makebelieve before diving into a
cheap restaurant or cheaper public-house for their food. The gulls
in the river were flying in long, lazy curves, dipping down to
the water, skimming it an instant, and then wheeling up again
with easy, slanting wings. Every few minutes a boat laden with
barrels puffed swiftly from beneath a bridge. All these boats
had pretty names - there was the Shannon, the Suir, the Nore,
the Lagan, and many others. The men on board sat contentedly on
the barrels and smoked and made slow remarks to one another; and
overhead the sky was blue and wonderful, immeasurably distant,
filled from horizon to horizon with sparkle and warmth. Mary Makebelieve
went slowly on towards the Park. She felt very happy. Now and
then a darker spot flitted through her mind, not at all obscuring,
but toning the brightness of her thoughts to a realisable serenity.
She wished her skirts were long enough to be held up languidly
[49] like the lady walking in front: the hand holding up the skirt
had a golden curb-chain on the wrist which drooped down to the
neatly-gloved hand, and between each link of the chain was set
a blue turquoise, and upon this jewel the sun danced splendidly.
Mary Makebelieve wished she had a slender red coral wristlet;
it also would have hung down to her palm and been lovely in the
sunlight, and it would, she thought, have been far nicer than
the bangle. [50]
Chap. IX
SHE WALKED along for some time in the Park. Through the railings
flanking the great road many beds of flowers could be seen. These
were laid out in a great variety of forms, of stars and squares
and crosses and circles, and the flowers were arranged in exquisite
patterns. There was a great star which flamed with red flowers
at the deep points, and in its heart a heavier mass of yellow
blossom glared suddenly. There were circles wherein each ring
was a differently-coloured flower, and others where three rings
alternated - three rings white, three purple, and three orange,
and so on in slenderer circles to the tiniest diminishing. Mary
Makebelieve wished she knew the names of all the flowers, but
the only ones she recognised by sight were the geraniums, some
species of roses, violets, and forget-me-nots [51] and pansies.
The more exotic sorts she did not know, and, while she admired
them greatly, she had not the same degree of affection for them
as for the commoner, friendly varieties.
Leaving the big road, she wandered into wider fields. In
a few moments the path was hidden; the outside cars, motor-cars,
and bicycles had vanished as completely as though there were no
such things in the world. Great numbers of children were playing
about in distinct bands; each troop was accompanied by one and
sometimes two older people, girls or women who lay stretched out
on the warm grass or leaned against the tree-trunks reading novelettes,
and around them the children whirled and screamed and laughed.
It was a world of waving pinafores and thin, black-stockinged
legs and shrill, sweet voices. In the great spaces the childrens
voices had a strangely remote quality; the sweet, high tones were
not such as one heard in the streets or in houses. In a house
or a street these voices thudded upon the air and beat sonorously
back again from the walls, the houses, or the pavements; but out
here the slender sounds sang to a higher tenuity and [52] disappeared
out and up and away into the tree-tops and the clouds and the
wide, windy reaches. The little figures partook also of this diminuendo
effect; against the great grassy curves they seemed smaller than
they really were; the trees stirred hugely above them, the grass
waved vast beneath them, and the sky ringed them in from immensity.
Their forms scarcely disturbed the big outline of nature; their
laughter only whispered against the silence, as ineffectual to
disturb that gigantic serenity as a gnats wing fluttered
against a precipice.
Mary Makebelieve wandered on; a few cows lifted solemnly
curious faces as she passed, and swung their heavy heads behind
her. Once or twice half a dozen deer came trotting from beyond
the trees, and were shocked to a halt on seeing her - a moments
gaze, and away like the wind, bounding in a delicious freedom.
Now a butterfly came twisting on some eccentric journey - ten
wing-beats to the left, twenty to the right, and then back to
the left, or, with a sudden twist, returning on the path which
it had already traversed, jerking carelessly through the sunlight.
Across the sky, very far up, a [53] troop of birds sailed definitely
- they knew where they were going; momently one would detach itself
from the others in a burst of joyous energy and sweep a great
circle and back again to its comrades, and then away, away, away
to the skyline. - Ye swift ones! O, freedom and sweetness! A song
falling from the heavens! A lilt through deep sunshine! Happy
wanderers! How fast ye fly and how bravely - up and up, till the
earth has fallen away and the immeasurable heavens and the deep
loneliness of the sunlight and the silence of great spaces receive
you!
Mary Makebelieve came to a tree around which a circular
wooden seat had been placed. Here for a time she sat looking out
on the wide fields. Far away in front the ground rolled down into
valleys and up into little hills, and from the valleys the green
heads of trees emerged, and on the further hills, in slender,
distinct silhouette, and in great masses, entire trees could be
seen. Nearer were single trees, each with its separate shadow
and a stream of sunlight flooding between; and everywhere the
greenery of leaves and of grass, and the gold of myriad buttercups,
and multitudes of white daisies. [54]
She had been sitting for some time when a shadow came from
behind her. She watched its lengthening and its queer bobbing
motion. When it grew to its greatest length it ceased to move.
She felt that some one had stopped. From the shape of the shadow
she knew it was a man, but being so close she did not like to
look. Then a voice spoke. It was a voice as deep as the rolling
of a sea.
Hello, said the voice, what are you doing
here all alone, young lady?
Mary Makebelieves heart suddenly spurted to full speed.
It seemed to want more space than her bosom could afford. She
looked up. Beside her stood a prodigious man: one lifted hand
curled his moustache, the other carelessly twirled a long cane.
He was dressed in ordinary clothing, but Mary Makebelieve knew
him at once for that great policeman who guided the traffic at
the Grafton Street crossing. [55]
Chap. X
THE POLICEMAN told her wonderful things. He informed her why the
Phoenix Park was called the Phoenix Park. He did not believe there
was a phoenix in the Zoological Gardens, although they probably
had every kind of bird in the world there. It had never struck
him, now he came to think of it, to look definitely for that bird,
but he would do so the next time he went into the Gardens. Perhaps
the young lady would allow him (it would be a much-appreciated
privilege) to escort her through the Gardens some fine day - the
following day, for instance ...? He rather inclined to the belief
that the phoenix was extinct - that is, died out; and then, again,
when he called to mind the singular habits with which this bird
was credited, he conceived that it had never had [56] a real but
only a mythical existence - that is, it was a makebelieve bird,
a kind of fairy tale.
He further informed Mary Makebelieve that this Park was
the third largest in the world, but the most beautiful. His evidence
for this statement was not only the local newspapers, whose opinion
might be biased by patriotism - that is, led away from the exact
truth; but in the more stable testimony of reputable English journals,
such as Answers and Tit-Bits and Pearsons Weekly, he found
an authoritative and gratifying confirmation - that is, they agreed.
He cited for Mary Makebelieves incredulity the exact immensity
of the Park in miles, in yards, and in acres, and the number of
head of cattle which could be accommodated therein if it were
to be utilised for grazing - that is, turned into grass lands;
or, if transformed into tillage, the number of small farmers who
would be the proprietors of economic holdings - that is, a recondite
- that is, an abstruse and a difficult scientific and sociological
term.
Mary Makebelieve scarcely dared lift her glance to his face.
An uncontrollable shyness had taken possession of her. Her [57]
eyes could not lift without an effort; they fluttered vainly upwards,
but before reaching any height they flinched aside and drooped
again to her lap. The astounding thought that she was sitting
beside a man warmed and affrighted her blood so that it rushed
burningly to her cheeks and went shuddering back again coldly.
Her downcast eyes were almost mesmerised by the huge tweed-clad
knees which towered like monoliths beside her. They rose much
higher than her knees did, and extended far out more than a foot
and a half beyond her own modest stretch. Her knees slanted gently
downwards as she sat, but his jagged straitly forward, like the
immovable knees of a god which she had seen once in the Museum.
On one of these great knees an equally great hand rested. Automatically
she placed her own hand on her lap and, awe-stricken, tried to
measure the difference. Her hand was very tiny and as white as
snow; it seemed so light that the breathing of a wind might have
fluttered it. The wrist was slender and delicate, and through
its milky covering faint blue veins glimmered. A sudden and passionate
wish came to her as she watched her wrist. She [58] wished she
had a red coral bracelet on it, or a chain of silver beaten into
flat discs, or even two twists of little green beads. The hand
that rested on the neighbouring knee was bigger by three times
than her own, the skin on it was tanned to the colour of ripe
mahogany-wood, and the heat of the day had caused great purple
veins to grow in knots and ridges across the back and running
in big twists down to the wrists. The specific gravity of that
hand seemed tremendous; she could imagine it holding down the
strong neck of a bull. It moved continually while he spoke to
her, closing in a tense strong grip that changed the mahogany
colour to a dull whiteness, and opening again to a ponderous,
inert width.
She was ashamed that she could find nothing to say. Her
vocabulary had suddenly and miserably diminished to a yes
and no, only tolerably varied by a timid indeed
and I did not know that. Against the easy clamour
of his speech she could find nothing to oppose, and ordinarily
her tongue tripped and eddied and veered as easily and nonchalantly
as a feather in a wind. But he did not mind silence. He interpreted
it rightly [59] as the natural homage of a girl to a policeman.
He liked this homage because it helped him to feel as big as he
looked, and he had every belief in his ability to conduct a polite
and interesting conversation with any lady for an indefinite time.
After a while Mary Makebelieve arose and was about bidding
him a timid good-bye. She wished to go away to her own little
room where she could look at herself and ask herself questions.
She wanted to visualise herself sitting under a tree beside a
man. She knew that she could reconstruct him to the smallest detail,
but feared that she might not be able to reconstruct herself.
When she arose he also stood up, and fell so naturally into step
beside her that there was nothing to do but to walk straight on.
He still withstood the burden of conversation easily and pleasantly
and very learnedly. He discussed matters of high political and
social moment, explaining generously the more unusual and learned
words which bristled from his vocabulary. Soon they came to a
more populous part of the Park. The children ceased from their
play to gaze round-eyed at the little girl and the big man; their
attendants looked and [60] giggled and envied. Under these eyes
Mary Makebelieves walk became afflicted with a sideward
bias which jolted her against her companion. She was furious with
herself and ashamed. She set her teeth to walk easily and straightly,
but constantly the jog of his elbow on her shoulder or the swing
of his hand against her blouse sent her ambling wretchedly arms-length
from him. When this had occurred half a dozen times she could
have plumped down on the grass and wept loudly and without restraint.
At the Park gate she stopped suddenly and, with the courage of
despair, bade him good-bye. He begged courteously to be allowed
to see her a little way to her home, but she would not permit
it, and so he lifted his hat to her. (Through her distress she
could still note in a subterranean and half-conscious fashion
the fact that this was the first time a man had ever uncovered
before her.) As she went away down the road she felt that his
eyes were following her, and her tripping walk hurried almost
to a run. She wished frantically that her dress was longer than
it was - that false hem! If she could have gathered a skirt in
her hand, the mere holding on to something [61] would have given
her self-possession, but she feared he was looking critically
at her short skirt and immodest ankles.
He stood for a time gazing after her with a smile on his
great face. He knew that she knew he was watching, and as he stood
he drew his hand from his pocket and tapped and smoothed his moustache.
He had a red moustache; it grew very thickly, but was cropped
short and square, and its fibre was so strong that it stood out
above his lip like wire. One expected it to crackle when he touched
it, but it never did. [62]
Chap. XI
WHEN MRS. MAKEBELIEVE came home that night she seemed very tired,
and complained that her work at Mrs. OConnors house
was arduous beyond any which she had yet engaged in. She enumerated
the many rooms that were in the house: those that were covered
with carpets, the margins whereof had to be beeswaxed; those others,
only partially covered with rugs, which had to be entirely waxed;
the upper rooms were uncarpeted and unrugged, and had, therefore,
to be scrubbed; the basement, consisting of two red-flagged kitchens
and a scullery, had also to be scoured out. The lady was very
particular about the scouring of wainscotings and doors. The upper
part of the staircase was bare and had to be scrubbed down, and
the part down to the hall had a thin strip of [63] carpet on it
secured by brazen rods; the margins on either side of this carpet
had to be beeswaxed and the brass rods polished. There was a great
deal of unnecessary and vexatious brass of one kind or another
scattered about the house, and as there were four children in
the family, besides Mrs. OConnor and her two, sisters, the
amount of washing which had constantly to be done was enormous
and terrifying.
During their tea Mrs. Makebelieve called to mind the different
ornaments which stood on the parlour mantelpiece and on the top
of the piano.. There was a china shepherdess with a basket of
flowers at one end of the mantelpiece and an exact duplicate on
the other. In the centre a big clock of speckled marble was surmounted
by a little domed edifice with Corinthian pillars in front, and
this again was topped by the figure of an archer with a bent bow
- there was nothing on top of this figure because there was not
any room. Between each of these articles there stood little framed
photographs of members of Mrs. OConnors family, and
behind all there was a carved looking-glass with bevelled edges
having many shelves. [64] Each shelf had a cup or a saucer or
a china bowl on it. On the left-hand side of the fireplace there
was a plaque whereon a young lady dressed in a sky-blue robe crossed
by means of well-defined stepping-stones a thin but furious stream;
the middle distance was embellished by a cow, and the horizon
sustained two white lambs, a brown dog, a fountain, and a sun-dial.
On the right-hand side a young gentleman clad in a crimson coat
and yellow knee-breeches carried a three-cornered hat under his
arm, and he also crossed a stream which seemed the exact counterpart
of the other one and whose perspective was similarly complicated.
There were three pictures on each wall - nine in all: three of
these were pictures of ships; three were pictures of battles;
two portrayed saintly but emaciated personages sitting in peculiarly
disheartening wildernesses (each wilderness contained one cactus
plant and a camel). One of these personages stared fixedly at
a skull; the other personage [65] looked with intense firmness
away from a lady of scant charms in a white and all-too-insufficient
robe: above the robe a segment of the ladys bosom was hinted
at bashfully - it was probably this the personage looked firmly
away from. The remaining picture showed a little girl seated in
a big arm-chair and reading with profound culture the most massive
of Bibles: she had her grandmothers mutch cap and spectacles
on, and looked very sweet and solemn; a doll sat bolt upright
beside her, and on the floor a kitten hunted a ball of wool with
great earnestness.
All these things Mrs. Makebelieve discussed to her daughter,
as also of the carpet which might have been woven in Turkey or
elsewhere, the sideboard that possibly was not mahogany, and the
chairs and occasional tables whose legs had attained to rickets
through convulsions; the curtains of cream-coloured lace which
were reinforced by rep hangings and guarded shutters from Venice,
also the deers head which stood on a shelf over the door
and was probably shot by a member of the family in a dream, and
the splendid silver tankards which flanked this trophy and were
possibly made of tin.
Mrs. Makebelieve further spoke of the personal characteristics
of the householder with an asperity which was still restrained.
She had a hairy chin, said Mrs. Makebelieve: [66] she had buck
teeth and a solid smile, and was given to telling people who knew
their business how things ought to be done. Beyond this she would
not say anything - The amount of soap the lady allowed to wash
out five rooms and a lengthy staircase was not as generous as
one was accustomed to, but, possibly, she was well-meaning enough
when one came to know her better.
Mary Makebelieve, apropos of nothing, asked her mother did
she ever know a girl who got married to a policeman, and did she
think that policemen were good men?
Her mother replied that policemen were greatly sought after
as husbands for several reasons - firstly, they were big men,
and big men are always good to look upon; secondly, their social
standing was very high and their respectability undoubted; thirdly,
a policemans pay was such as would bring comfort to any
household which was not needlessly and criminally extravagant,
and this was often supplemented in a variety of ways which rumour
only hinted at (there was also the safe prospect of a pension
and the possibility of a sergeantship, where the emoluments were
very great); and fourthly, a policeman, being [67] subjected for
many years to a rigorous discipline, would likely make a nice
and obedient husband. Personally Mrs. Makebelieve did not admire
policemen - they thought too much of themselves, and their continual
pursuit of and intercourse with criminals tended to deteriorate
their moral tone; also, being much admired by a certain type of
woman, their morals were subjected to so continuous an assault
that the wife of such a one would be worn to a shadow in striving
to preserve her husband from designing and persistent females.
Mary Makebelieve said she thought it would be nice to have
other women dying for love of ones husband, but her mother
opposed this with the reflection that such people did not die
for love at all - they were merely anxious to gratify a foolish
and excessive pride, or to inflict pain on respectable married
women. On the whole, a policeman was not an ideal person to marry.
The hours at which he came home were liable to constant and vexatious
changes, so that there was a continual feeling of insecurity,
which was bad for housekeeping; and if one had not stability in
ones home all discipline and all real home life was [68]
at an end. There was this to be said for them - that they all
loved little children. But, all things considered, a clerk made
a better husband: his hours were regular, and knowing where he
was at any moment, ones mind was at ease.
Mary Makebelieve was burning to tell some one of her adventure
during the day, but although she had never before kept a secret
from her mother she was unable to tell her this one. Something
- perhaps the mere difference of age, and also a kind of shyness
- kept her silent. She wished she knew a nice girl of her own
age, or even a little younger, to whose enraptured ear she might
have confided her story. They would have hugged each other during
the recital, and she would have been able to enlarge upon an hundred
trivialities of moustache and hair and eyes, the wonder of which
older minds can seldom appreciate.
Her mother said she did not feel at all well. She did not
know what was the matter with her, but she was more tired than
she could remember being for a long time. There was a dull aching
in all her bones, a coldness in her limbs, and when she pressed
her hair backwards [69] it hurt her head; so she went to bed much
earlier than was usual. But long after her regular time for sleep
had passed Mary Makebelieve crouched on the floor before the few
warm coals. She was looking into the redness, seeing visions of
rapture, strange things which could not possibly be true; but
these visions warmed her blood and lifted her heart on light and
tremulous wings; there was a singing in her ears to which she
could never be tired listening. [70]
Chap. XII
MRS. MAKEBELIEVE felt much better the next morning after the extra
sleep which she had. She still confessed to a slight pain in her
scalp when she brushed her hair, and was a little languid, but
not so much as to call for complaint. She sat up in bed while
her daughter prepared the breakfast, and her tongue sped as rapidly
as heretofore. She said she had a sort of feeling that her brother
Patrick must come back from America some time, and she was sure
that when he did return he would lose no time in finding out his
relatives and sharing with them the wealth which he had amassed
in that rich country. She had memories of his generosity even
as a mere infant, when he would always say no if only
half a potato remained in the dish or a solitary slice of bread
was on [71]the platter. She delighted to talk of his good looks
and high spirits and of the amazingly funny things he had said
and done. There was always, of course, the chance that Patrick
had got married and settled down in America, and, if so, that
would account for so prolonged a silence. Wives always came between
a man and his friends, and this woman would do all she could to
prevent Patrick benefiting his own sister and her child. Even
in Ireland there were people like that, and the more one heard
of America the less one knew what to expect from the strange people
who were native to that place. She had often thought she would
like to go out there herself, and, indeed, if she had a little
money she would think nothing of packing up her things to-morrow
and setting out for the States. There were fine livings to be
made there, and women were greatly in request, both as servants
and wives. It was well known, too, that the Americans loved Irish
people, and so there would be no difficulty at all in getting
a start. The more she thought of Mrs. OConnor, the more
favourably she pondered on emigration. She would say nothing against
[72] Mrs. OConnor yet, but the fact remained that she had
a wen on her cheek and buck teeth. Either of these afflictions
taken separately was excusable, but together she fancied they
betoken a bad, sour nature; but maybe the woman was to be pitied:
she might be a nice person in herself, but, then, there was the
matter of the soap, and she was very fond of giving unnecessary
orders. However, time would show, and, clients being as scarce
as they were, one could not quarrel with ones bread and
butter.
The opening of a door and the stamping downstairs of heavy
feet shot Mrs. Makebelieve from her bed and into her clothing
with furious speed. Within five minutes she was dressed, and after
kissing her daughter three times she fled down the stairs and
away to her business.
Mary had obtained her mothers consent to do as she
pleased with the piece of black velvet on the hem of her Sunday
skirt, so she passed some time in ripping this off and cleaning
it. It would not come as fresh as she desired, and there were
some parts of it frayed and rubbed so that the velvet was nearly
lost, but other portions were quite [73] good, and by cutting
out the worn parts and neatly joining the good pieces she at last
evolved a quite passable sash. Having the sash ready, she dressed
herself to see how it looked, and was delighted. Then, becoming
dissatisfied with the severe method of doing her hair, she manipulated
it gently for a few minutes until a curl depended by both ears
and two or three very tiny ones fluttered above her forehead.
She put on her hat and stole out, walking very gently for fear
any of the other people in the house would peep through their
doors as she went by. Walk as gently as she could, these bare,
solid stairs rang loudly to each footfall, and so she ended in
a rush and was out and away without daring to look if she was
observed. She had a sort of guilty feeling as she walked, which
she tried to allay by saying very definitely that she was not
doing anything wrong. She said to herself with determined candour
that she would walk up to the St. Stephens Green Park and
look at the ducks and the flower-beds and the eels, but when she
reached the quays she blushed deeply, and turning towards the
right, went rapidly in the direction of the Phoenix Park. She
told herself that [74] she was not going in there, but would merely
take a walk by the river, cross at Island Bridge, and go back
on the opposite side of the Liffey to the Green. But when she
saw the broad sunlit road gleaming through the big gates she thought
she would go for a little way up there to look at the flowers
behind the railings. As she went in a great figure came from behind
the newspaper kiosk outside the gates and followed Mary up the
road. When she paused to look at the flowers the great figure
halted also, and when she went on again it followed. Mary walked
past the Gough Statue and turned away into the fields and the
trees, and here the figure lengthened its stride. In the middle
of the field a big shadow bobbed past her shoulder, and she walked
on holding her breath and watching the shadow growing by queer
forward jerks. In a moment the dull beat of feet on grass banished
all thought of the shadow, and then there came a cheerful voice
in her ears, and the big policeman was standing by her side. For
a few moments they were stationary, making salutation and excuse
and explanation, and then they walked slowly on through the sunshine.
Wherever there was [75] a bush there were flowers on it. Every
tree was thronged with birds that sang shrilly and sweetly in
sudden thrills and clear sustained melodies, but in the open spaces
the silence was more wonderful; there was no bird note to come
between Mary and that deep voice, no shadow of a tree to swallow
up their own two shadows; and the sunlight was so mildly warm,
the air was so sweet and pure, and the little wind that hushed
by from the mountains was a tender and a peaceful wind. [76]
Chap. XIII
AFTER THAT DAY Mary Makebelieve met her new friend frequently.
Somehow, wherever she went, he was not far away; he seemed to
spring out of space - one moment she was alone watching the people
passing and the hurrying cars and the thronged and splendid shop
windows, and then a big voice was booming down to her and a big
form was pacing deliberately by her side. Twice he took her into
a restaurant and gave her lunch. She had never been in a restaurant
before, and it seemed to her like a place in fairyland. The semi-darkness
of the retired rooms faintly coloured by tiny electric lights,
the beautifully clean tables and the strange foods, the neatly
dressed waitresses with quick, deft movements and gravely attentive
faces - these things thrilled her. She noticed that the girls
in the restaurant, in spite of [77] their gravity and industry,
observed both herself and the big man with the minutest inspection,
and she felt that they all envied her the attentions of so superb
a companion. In the street also she found that many people looked
at them, but, listening to his constant and easy speech, she could
not give these people the attention they deserved.
When they did not go to the Park they sought the most reserved
streets or walked out to the confines of the town and up by the
river Dodder. There are exquisitely beautiful places along the
side of the Dodder: shy little harbours and backwaters, and now
and then a miniature waterfall or a broad, placid reach upon which
the sun beats down like silver. Along the river-bank the grass
grows rank and wildly luxurious, and at this season, warmed by
the sun, it was a splendid place to sit. She thought she could
sit there for ever watching the shining river and listening to
the great voice by her side.
He told her many things about himself and about his comrades
- those equally huge men. She could see them walking with slow
vigour through their barrack-yard, falling in for exercise or
gymnastics or for [78] school. She wondered [102] what they were
taught, and who had sufficient impertinence to teach giants, and
were they ever slapped for not knowing their lessons? He told
her of his daily work, the hours when he was on and off duty,
the hours when he rose in the morning and when he went to bed.
He told her of night duty, and drew a picture of the blank deserted
streets which thrilled and frightened her ... the tense darkness,
and how through the silence the sound of a footstep was magnified
a thousand-fold, ringing down the desolate pathways away and away
to the smallest shrill distinctness; and she saw also the alleys
and lane-ways hooded in blackness, and the one or two human fragments
who drifted aimless and frantic along the lonely streets, striving
to walk easily for fear of their own thundering footsteps, cowering
in the vastness of the city, dwarfed and shivering beside the
gaunt houses; the thousands upon thousands of black houses, each
deadly silent, each seeming to wait and listen for the morning,
and each teeming with men and women who slept in peace because
he was walking up and down outside, flashing his lantern on shop
windows, [79] and feeling doors to see if they were by any chance
open. Now and again a step from a great distance would tap-tap-tap,
a far-off delicacy of sound, and either die away down echoing
side streets or come clanking on to where he stood, growing louder
and clearer and more resonant, ringing again and again in doubled
and trebled echoes; while he, standing far back in a doorway,
watched to see who was abroad at the dead of night - and then
that person went away on his strange errand, his footsteps trampling
down immense distances, till the last echo and the last faint
tremble of his feet eddied into the stillness. Now and again a
cat dodged gingerly along a railing, or a strayed dog slunk fearfully
down the pathway, nosing everywhere in and out of the lamplight,
silent and hungry and desperately eager. He told her stories also,
wonderful tales of great fights and cunning tricks, of men and
women whose whole lives were tricks, of people who did not know
how to live except by theft and violence; people who were born
by stealth, who ate by subterfuge, drank by dodges, got married
in attics, and slid into death by strange, subterranean passages.
[80] He told her the story of the Two Hungry Men, and of The Sailor
who had been Robbed, and a funny tale about the Barber who had
Two Mothers. He also told her the stories of The Eight Tinkers
and of the Old Women who Steal Fish at Night-time, and the story
of The Man he Let Off, and he told her a terrible story of how
he fought five men in a little room, and he showed her a great
livid scar hidden by his cap, and the marks in his neck where
he had been stabbed with a jagged bottle, and his wrist which
an Italian madman had thrust through and through with a dagger.
But though he was always talking, he was not always talking
of himself. Through his conversation there ran a succession of
queries - tiny, slender questions which ran out of his stories
and into her life - questions so skilful and natural and spontaneous
that only a girl could discover the curiosity which prompted them.
He wanted her name, her address, her mothers name, her fathers
name; had she other relatives, did she go to work yet, what was
her religion, was it a long time since she left school, and what
was her mothers business? To all of these [81] Mary Makebelieve
answered with glad candour. She saw each question coming, and
the personal curiosity lying behind it she divined and was glad
of. She would have loved to ask him personal and intimate questions
about his parents, his brothers and sisters, and what he said
when he said his prayers, and had he walked with other girls,
and, if so, what had he said to them, and what did he really and
truly think of her? Her curiosity on all these points was abundant
and eager, but she did not dare to even hint a question.
One of the queries often touched upon by him she eluded
- she shrank from it with something like terror - it was, What
was her mothers business? She could not bear to say
that her mother was a charwoman. It did not seem fitting. She
suddenly hated and was ashamed of this occupation. It took on
an aspect of incredible baseness. It seemed to be the meanest
employment wherein any one could be engaged; and so when the question,
conveyed in a variety of ways, had to be answered it was answered
with reservations - Mary Makebelieve told him a lie. She said
her mother was a dressmaker. [82]
Chap. XIV
ONE NIGHT when Mrs. Makebelieve came home she was very low-spirited
indeed. She complained once more of a headache and of a languor
which she could not account for. She said it gave her all the
trouble in the world to lift a bucket. It was not exactly that
she could not lift a bucket, but that she could scarcely close
her mind down to the fact that a bucket had to be lifted. Some
spring of willingness seemed to be temporarily absent. To close
her two hands on a floor-cloth and twist it into a spiral in order
to wring it thoroughly was a thing which she found herself imagining
she could do if she liked, but had not the least wish to do. These
duties, even when she was engaged in them, had a curious quality
of remoteness. The bucket into which her hand had been [83] plunged
a moment before seemed somehow incredibly distant. To lift the
soap lying beside the bucket one would require an arm of more
than human reach, and having washed, or rather dabbed, at a square
of flooring, it was a matter of grave concern how to reach the
unwashed part just beyond without moving herself. This languor
alarmed her. The pain in her head, while it was severe, did not
really matter. Every one had pains and aches, sores and sprains,
but this unknown weariness and disinclination for the very slightest
exertion gave her a fright.
Mary tempted her to come out and watch the people going
into the Gaiety Theatre. She said a certain actor was playing
whom all the women of Dublin make pilgrimages, even from distant
places, to look at; and by going at once they might be in time
to see him arriving in a motor-car at the stage door, when they
could have a good look at him getting out of the car and going
into the theatre. At these tidings Mrs. Makebelieve roused for
a moment from her strange apathy. Since tea-time she had sat (not
as usual upright and gesticulating, but humped up and flaccid)
staring at a blob of [84] condensed milk on the outside of the
tin. She said she thought she would go out and see the great actor,
although what all the women saw in him to go mad about she did
not know, but in another moment she settled back to her humped-up
position and restored her gaze to the condensed milk tin. With
a little trouble Mary got her to bed, where, after being hugged
for one moment, she went swiftly and soundly to sleep.
Mary was troubled because of her mothers illness,
but, as it is always difficult to believe in the serious illness
of another person until death has demonstrated its gravity, she
soon dismissed the matter from her mind. This was the more easily
done because her mind was teeming with impressions and pictures
and scraps of dialogue.
As her mother was sleeping peacefully, Mary put on her hat
and went out. She wanted, in her then state of mind, to walk in
the solitude which can only be found in crowded places, and also
she wanted some kind of distraction. Her days had lately been
so filled with adventure that the placid immobility of the top
back room was not only irksome but maddening, and her mother [85]
s hasty and troubled breathing came between her and her
thoughts. The poor furniture of the room was hideous to her eyes;
the uncarpeted floor and bleak, stained walls dulled her.
She went out, and in a few moments was part of the crowd
which passes and repasses nightly from the Rotunda up the broad
pathways of Sackville Street, across OConnell Bridge, up
Westmoreland Street, past Trinity College, and on through the
brilliant lights of Grafton Street to the Fusiliers Arch
at the entrance to St. Stephens Green Park. Here from half-past
seven oclock in the evening youthful Dublin marches in joyous
procession. Sometimes bevies of young girls dance by, each a giggle
incarnate. A little distance behind these a troop of young men
follow stealthily and critically. They will be acquainted and
more or less happily paired before the Bridge is reached. But
generally the movement is in couples. Appointments, dating from
the previous night, have filled the streets with happy and careless
boys and girls - they are not exactly courting, they are enjoying
the excitement of fresh acquaintance; old conversation is here
poured into new [86] bottles, old jokes have the freshness of
infancy, every one is animated, and polite to no one but his partner;
the people they meet and pass and those who overtake and pass
them are all subjects for their wit and scorn, while they, in
turn, furnish a moments amusement and conversation to each
succeeding couple. Constantly there are stoppages when very high-bred
introductions result in a re-distribution of the youngsters. As
they move apart the words To-morrow night, or Thursday,
or Friday are called laughingly back, showing that
the late partner is not to be lost sight of utterly; and then
the procession begins anew.
Among these folk Mary Makebelieve passed rapidly. She knew
that if she walked slowly some partially - elaborate gentleman
would ask suddenly what she had been doing with herself since
last Thursday, and would introduce her as Kate Ellen to six precisely
similar young gentlemen, who smiled blandly in a semicircle six
feet distant. This had happened to her once before, and as she
fled the six young gentlemen had roared Bow, wow, wow
after her, while the seventh mewed earnestly and with noise. [87]
She stood for a time watching the people thronging into
the Gaiety Theatre. Some came in motor-cars, others in carriages.
Many hearse-like cabs deposited weighty and respectable solemnities
under the glass-roofed vestibule. Swift outside cars buzzed on
rubber tyres with gentlemen clad in evening dress, and ladies
whose silken wraps blew gently from their shoulders, and, in addition,
a constant pedestrian stream surged along the pathway. From the
shelter of an opposite doorway Mary watched these gaily animated
people. She envied them all innocently enough, and wondered would
the big policeman ever ask her to go to the theatre with him,
and if he did, would her mother let her go. She thought her mother
would refuse, but was dimly certain that in some way she would
manage to get out if such a delightful invitation were given her.
She was dreaming of the alterations she would make in her best
frock in anticipation of such a treat when, half-consciously,
she saw a big figure appear round the corner of Grafton Street
and walk towards the theatre. It was he, and her heart jumped
with delight. She prayed that he would not see her, and then [88]
she prayed that he would, and then, with a sudden, sickening coldness,
she saw that he was not alone. A young, plump, rosycheeked girl
was at his side. As they came nearer the girl put her arm into
his and said something. He bent down to her and replied, and she
flashed a laugh up at him. There was a swift interchange of sentences,
and they both laughed together; then they disappeared into the
half-crown door.
Mary shrank back into the shadow of the doorway. She had
a strange notion that everybody was trying to look at her, and
that they were all laughing maliciously. After a few moments she
stepped out on the path and walked homewards quickly. She did
not hear the noises of the streets, nor see the promenading crowds.
Her face was bent down as she walked, and beneath the big brim
of her straw hat her eyes were blinded with the bitterest tears
she had ever shed. [89]
Chap. XV
NEXT MORNING her mother was no better. She made no attempt to
get out of bed, and listened with absolute indifference when the
morning feet of the next-door man pounded the stairs. Mary awakened
her again and again, but each time, after saying All right,
dearie, she relapsed to a slumber which was more torpor
than sleep. Her yellow, old-ivory face was faintly tinged with
colour; her thin lips were relaxed, and seemed a trifle fuller,
so that Mary thought she looked better in sickness than in health;
but the limp arm lying on the patchwork quilt seemed to be more
skinny than thin, and the hand was more waxen and claw-like than
heretofore.
Mary laid the breakfast on the bed as usual, and, again
awakened her mother, who, after staring into vacancy for a few
moments, [90] forced herself to her elbow, and then, with sudden
determination, sat up in the bed and bent her mind inflexibly
on her breakfast. She drank two cups of tea greedily, but the
bread had no taste in her mouth, and after swallowing a morsel
she laid it aside.
I dont know whats up with me at all, at
all, said she.
Maybe its a cold, mother, replied Mary.
Do I look bad, now?
Mary scrutinised her narrowly.
No, she answered; your face is redder
than it does be, and your eyes are shiny. I think you look splendid
and well. What way do you feel?
I dont feel at all, except that Im sleepy.
Give me the glass in my hand, dearie, till I see what Im
like.
Mary took the glass from the wall and handed it to her.
I dont look bad at all. A bit of colour always
suited me. Look at my tongue, though, its very, very dirty;
its a bad tongue altogether. My mother had a tongue like
that, Mary, when she died.
Have you any pain? said her daughter. [91]
No, dearie; there is a buzz in the front of my head
as if something was spinning round and round very quickly, and
that makes my eyes tired, and theres a sort of feeling as
if my head was twice as heavy as it should be. Hang up the glass
again. Ill try and get a sleep, and maybe Ill be better
when I waken up. Run you out and get a bit of steak, and well
stew it down and make beef-tea, and maybe that will do me good.
Give me my purse out of the pocket of my skirt.
Mary found the purse and brought it to the bed. Her mother
opened it and brought out a thimble, a bootlace, five buttons,
one sixpenny piece and a penny. She gave Mary the sixpence.
Get half a pound of leg beef, said she, and
then well have fourpence left for bread and tea: no, take
the other penny, too, and get half a pound of pieces at the butchers
for twopence, and a twopenny tin of condensed milk, thats
fourpence; and a three-hapenny loaf and one penny for tea,
thats sixpence hapenny; and get onions with the odd
hapenny, and well put them in the beef-tea. Dont
forget, dearie, to pick lean bits of meat; [92] them fellows do
be always trying to stick bits of bone and gristle on a body.
Tell him its for beef-tea for your mother, and that Im
not well at all, and ask how Mrs. Quinn is; she hasnt been
down in the shop for a long time. Ill go to sleep now. Ill
have to go to work in the morning whatever happens, because there
isnt any money in the house at all. Come home as quick as
you can, dearie.
Mary dressed herself and went out for the provisions, but
she did not buy them at once. As she went down the street she
turned suddenly, clasping her hands in a desperate movement, and
walked very quickly in the opposite direction. She turned up the
side streets to the quays, and along these to the Park gates.
Her hands were clasping and unclasping in an agony of impatience,
and her eyes roved busily here and there, flying among the few
pedestrians like lanterns. She went through the gates and up the
broad central path, and here she walked more slowly: but
she did not see the flowers behind the railings, or even the sunshine
that bathed the world in glory. At the monument she sped a furtive
glance down the road she had travelled - there was nobody behind
her. She turned into the [93] fields, walking under trees which
she did not see, and up hills and down valleys without noticing
the incline of either. At times, through the tatter of her mind
there blazed a memory of her mother lying sick at home, waiting
for her daughter to return with food, and at such memories she
gripped her hands together frightfully and banished the thought.
- A moments reflection and she could have hated her mother.
It was nearly five oclock before she left the Park.
She walked in a fog of depression. For hours she had gone hither
and thither in the well-remembered circle, every step becoming
more wayward and aimless. The sun had disappeared, and a grey
evening bowed down upon the fields; the little wind that whispered
along the grass or swung the light branches of the trees had a
bleak edge to it. As she left the big gates she was chilled through
and through, but the memory of her mother now set her running
homewards. For the time she forgot her quest among the trees,
and thought only, with shame and fear, of what her mother would
say, and of the reproachful, amazed eyes which would be turned
on her when she went in. What could she [94] say? She could not
imagine anything. How could she justify a neglect which must appear
gratuitous, cold-blooded, inexplicable?
When she had brought the food and climbed the resonant stairs
she stood outside the door crying softly to herself. She hated
to open the door. She could imagine her mother sitting up in the
bed dazed and unbelieving, angry and frightened, imagining accidents
and terrors, and when she would go in ... She had an impulse to
open the door gently, leave the food just inside, and run down
the stairs out into the world anywhere and never come back again.
At last in desperation she turned the handle and stepped inside.
Her face flamed; the blood burned her eyes physically so that
she could not see through them. She did not look at the bed, but
went direct to the fireplace, and with a dogged patience began
mending the fire. After a few stubborn moments she twisted violently
to face whatever might come, ready to break into angry reproaches
and impertinences; but her mother was lying very still. She was
fast asleep, and a weight, an absolutely real pressure, was lifted
from Marys heart. Her fingers flew about the preparation
of the beef-tea. She forgot [95] the man whom she had gone to
meet. Her arms were tired and hungry to close around her mother.
She wanted to whisper little childish words to her, to rock her
to and fro on her breast, and croon little songs and kiss her
and pat her face. [96]
Chap. XVI
HER MOTHER did not get better. Indeed, she got worse. In addition
to the lassitude of which she had complained, she suffered also
from great heat and great cold, and, furthermore, sharp pains
darted so swiftly through her brows that at times she was both
dizzy and sightless. A twirling movement in her head prevented
her from standing up. Her centre of gravity seemed destroyed,
for when she did stand and attempted to walk she had a strange
bearing away on one side, so that on striving to walk towards
the door she veered irresistibly at least four feet to the left-hand
side of that point. Mary Makebelieve helped her back to bed, where
she lay for a time watching horizontal lines spinning violently
in front of her face, and these lines after a time crossed and
recrossed each other in so [97] mazy and intricate a pattern that
she became violently sick from the mere looking at them.
All of these things she described to her daughter, tracing
the queer patterns which were spinning about her with such fidelity
that Mary was almost able to see them. She also theorised about
the cause and ultimate effect of these symptoms, and explained
the degrees of heat and cold which burned or chilled her, and
the growth of a pain to its exquisite startling apex, its subsequent
slow recession, and the thud of an india-rubber hammer which ensued
when the pain had ebbed to its easiest level. It did not occur
to either of them to send for a doctor. Doctors in such cases
are seldom sent for, seldom even thought of. One falls sick according
to some severely definite, implacable law with which it is foolish
to quarrel, and one gets well again for no other reason than that
it is impossible to be sick for ever. As the night struggles slowly
into day, so sickness climbs stealthily into health, and nature
has a system of medicining her ailments which might only be thwarted
by the ministrations of a mere doctor. Doctors also expect payment
for their services - an expectation so wildly beyond the range
of [98] common sense as to be ludicrous. Those who can scarcely
fee a baker when they are in health can certainly not remunerate
a physician when they are ill.
But, despite her sickness, Mrs. Makebelieve was worried
with the practical common politics of existence. The food purchased
with her last sevenpence was eaten beyond remembrance. The vital
requirements of the next day, and the following day, and of all
subsequent days thronged upon her, clamouring for instant attention.
The wraith of a landlord sat on her bed demanding rent and threatening
grisly alternatives. Goblins that were bakers and butchers and
grocers grinned and leered and jabbered from the corners of the
room.
Each day Mary Makebelieve went to the pawn office with something.
They lived for a time on the only capital they had - the poor
furniture of their room. Everything which had even the narrowest
margin of value was sold. Marys dresses kept them for six
days. Her mothers Sunday skirt fed them for another day.
They held famine at bay with a patchwork quilt and a crazy wash-stand.
A water-jug and a strip of oilcloth tinkled momentarily against
the teeth of the wolf and [99] disappeared. The maw of hunger
was not incommoded by the window curtain.
At last the room was as bare as a desert and almost as uninhabitable.
A room without furniture is a ghostly place. Sounds made therein
are uncanny; even the voice puts off its humanity and rings back
with a bleak and hollow note, an empty resonance tinged with the
frost of winter. There is no other sound so deadly, so barren
and dispiriting, as the echoes of an empty room. The gaunt woman
in the bed seemed less gaunt than her residence, and there was
nothing more to be sent to the pawnbroker or the second-hand dealer.
A post-card came from Mrs. OConnor requesting, in
the peremptory language customary to such communications, that
Mrs. Makebelieve would please call on her the following morning
before eight oclock. Mrs. Makebelieve groaned as she read
it. It meant work and food and the repurchase of her household
goods, and she knew that on the following morning she would not
be able to get up. She lay a while thinking, and then called her
daughter.
Dearie, said she, you will have to go
[100] to this place in the morning and try what you can do. Tell
Mrs. OConnor that I am sick, and that you are my daughter
and will do the work, and try and do the best you can for a while.
She caught her daughters head down to her bosom and
wept over her, for she saw in this work a beginning and an end
- the end of the little daughter who could be petted and rocked
and advised; the beginning of a womanhood which would grow up
to and beyond her, which would collect and secrete emotions and
aspirations and adventures not to be shared even by a mother;
and she saw the failure which this work meant, the expanding of
her daughters life ripples to a bleak and miserable horizon
where the clouds were soap-suds and floor-cloths, and the beyond
a blank resignation only made energetic by hunger.
Oh, my dear, said she, I hate to think
of you having to do such work, but it will only be for a while,
a week, and then I will be well again. Only a little week, my
love, my sweetheart, my hearts darling. [101]
Chap. XVII
EARLY ON the following morning Mary Makebelieve awakened with
a start. She felt as if some one had called her, and lay for a
few moments to see had her mother spoken. But her mother was still
asleep. Her slumber was at all times almost as energetic as her
wakening hours. She twisted constantly and moved her hands and
spoke ramblingly. Odd interjections, such as Ah, well!
No matter! Certainly not! and Indeed
aye! shot from her lips like bullets, and at intervals a
sarcastic sniff fretted or astonished her bedfellow into wakefulness.
But now as she lay none of these strenuous ejaculations were audible.
Sighs only, weighty and deep-drawn and very tired, broke on her
lips and lapsed sadly into the desolate room.
Mary Makebelieve lay for a time wondering idly what had
awakened her so completely, for her eyes were wide open and every
vestige of sleep was gone from her brain; and then she remembered
that on this morning, and for the first time in her life, she
had to go to work. That knowledge had gone to bed with her and
had awakened her with an imperious urgency. In an instant she
sprang out of bed, huddled on sufficient clothing for warmth,
and set about lighting the fire. She was far too early awake,
but could not compose herself to lie for another moment in bed.
She did not at all welcome the idea of going to work, but the
interest attaching to a new thing, the freshness which vitalises
for a time even the dreariest undertaking, prevented her from
rueing with any bitterness her first days work. To a young
person even work is an adventure, and anything which changes the
usual current of life is welcome. The fire also went with her;
in quite a short time the flames had gathered to a blaze, and
matured, and concentrated to the glowing redness of perfect combustion;
then, when the smoke had disappeared with the flames, she put
on the saucepan of water. Quickly the saucepan boiled, and she
wet the tea. She cut the [103] bread into slices, put a spoonful
of condensed milk into each cup, and awakened her mother.
All through the breakfast her mother advised her on the
doing of her work. She cautioned her daughter when scrubbing woodwork
always to scrub against the grain, for this gave a greater purchase
to the brush, and removed the dirt twice as quickly as the seemingly
easy opposite movement. She told her never to save soap - little
soap meant much rubbing - and advised that she should scrub two
minutes with one hand and then two minutes with the other hand;
and she was urgent on the necessity of thoroughness in the wringing
out of ones floor-cloth, because a dry floor-cloth takes
up twice as much water as a wet one, and thus lightens labour;
also she advised Mary to change her positions as frequently as
possible to avoid cramp when scrubbing, and to kneel up or stand
up when wringing her cloths, as this would give her a rest, and
the change of movement would relieve her very greatly; and above
all to take her time about the business, because haste seldom
resulted in clean work, and was never appreciated by ones
employer. [104]
Before going out Mary Makebelieve had to arrange for some
one to look after her mother during the day. This is an arrangement
which, among poor people, is never difficult of accomplishment.
The first to whom she applied was the labouring mans wife
in the next room; she was a vast woman with six children and a
laugh like the rolling of a great wind, and when Mary Makebelieve
advanced her request she shook six children off her like toys
and came out on the landing.
Run off to your work now, honey, said she, and
let you be easy in your mind about your mother, for Ill
go up to her this minute, and when Im not there myself Ill
leave one of the children with her to call me if she wants anything;
and dont you be fretting at all, God help you! for shell
be as safe and as comfortable with me as if she was in Jervis
Street Hospital or the Rotunda itself. Whats wrong with
her now? Is it a pain in her head she has, or a sick stomach,
God help her?
Mary explained briefly, and as she went down the stairs
she saw the big woman going into her mothers room.
She had not been out in the streets so early [105] before,
and had never known the wonder and beauty of the sun in the early
morning. The streets were almost deserted, and the sunlight -
a most delicate and nearly colourless radiance - fell gently on
the long silent paths. Missing the customary throng of people
and traffic, she seemed almost in a strange country, and had to
look twice for turnings which she could easily have found with
her eyes shut. The shutters were up in all the shops, and the
blinds were down in most of the windows. Now and again a milk
cart came clattering and rattling down a street, and now and again
a big red-painted bakers cart dashed along the road. Such
few pedestrians as she met were poorly dressed men, who carried
tommy cans and tools, and they were all walking at a great pace,
as if they feared they were late for somewhere. Three or four
boys passed her running; one of these had a great lump of bread
in his hand, and as he ran he tore pieces off the bread with his
teeth and ate them. The streets looked cleaner than she had thought
they could look, and the houses seemed very quiet and beautiful.
When she came near a policeman she looked at him keenly from a
distance, hoping and fearing [106] that it might be her friend,
but she did not see him. She had a sinking feeling at the thought
that maybe he would be in the Phoenix Park this day looking for
her, and might, indeed, have been there for the past few days,
and the thought that he might be seeking for her unavailingly
stabbed through her mind like a pain. It did not seem right, it
was not in proportion, that so big a man should seek for a mere
woman and not find one instantly to hand. It was pitiful to think
of the huge man looking on this side and on that, peering behind
trees and through distances, and thinking that maybe he was forgotten
or scorned. Mary Makebelieve almost wept at the idea that he should
fancy she scorned him. She wondered how, under such circumstances,
a small girl can comfort a big man. One may fondle his hand, but
that is miserably inadequate. She wished she was twice as big
as he was, so that she might lift him bodily to her breast and
snuggle and hug him like a kitten. So comprehensive an embrace
alone could atone for injury to a big mans feelings.
In about twenty minutes she reached Mrs. OConnors
house and knocked. She had to [107] knock half a dozen times before
she was admitted, and on being admitted had a great deal of trouble
explaining who she was, and why her mother had not come, and that
she was quite competent to undertake the work. She knew the person
who opened the door for her was not Mrs. OConnor, because
she had not a hairy wart on her chin, nor had she buck teeth.
After a little delay she was brought to the scullery and given
a great pile of childrens clothing to wash, and after starting
this work she was left to herself for a long time. [108]
Chap. XVIII
IT WAS A dark house. The windows were all withered away behind
stiff curtains, and the light that laboured between these was
chastened to the last degree of respectability. The doors skulked
behind heavy plush hangings. The floors hid themselves decently
under thick red and black carpets, and the margins which were
uncarpeted were disguised by beeswax, so that no one knew they
were there at all. The narrow hall was steeped in shadow, for
there two black velvet portieres, at distances of six feet apart,
depended from rods in the ceiling. Similar palls flopped on each
landing of the staircase, and no sound was heard in the house
at all, except dim voices that droned from somewhere, muffled
and sepulchral and bodiless.
At ten oclock, having finished the washing, [109]
Mary was visited by Mrs. OConnor, whom she knew at once
by the signs she had been warned of. The lady subjected each article
that had been washed to a particular scrutiny, and, with the shadowy
gallop of a smile that dashed into and out of sight in an instant,
said they would do. She then conducted Mary to the kitchen and,
pointing to a cup of tea and two slices of bread, invited her
to breakfast, and left her for six minutes, when she reappeared
with the suddenness of a marionette and directed her to wash her
cup and saucer, and then to wash the kitchen, and these things
also Mary did.
She got weary very soon, but not dispirited, because there
were many things to look at in the kitchen. There were pots of
various sizes and metals, saucepans little and big, jugs of all
shapes, and a regiment of tea things were ranged on the dresser;
on the walls were hung great pot-lids like the shields of barbarous
warriors which she had seen in a story-book. Under the kitchen
table there was a row of boots, all wrinkled by usage, and each
wearing a human and almost intelligent aspect - a well-wrinkled
boot has often an appearance of mad humanity which can chain [110]
and almost hypnotise the observer. As she lifted the boots out
of her way she named each by its face. There was Grubtoes, Sloucher,
Thump-thump, Hoppit, Twitter, Hide-away, and Fairybell.
While she was working a young girl came into the kitchen
and took up the boots called Fairybell. Mary just tossed a look
at her as she entered and bent again to her washing. Then with
an extreme perturbation she stole another look. The girl was young
and as trim as a sunny garden. Her face was packed with laughter
and freedom, like a young morning when tender rosy clouds sail
in the sky. She walked with a light spring of happiness; each
step seemed the beginning of a dance, light and swift and certain.
Mary knew her in a pang, and her bent face grew redder than the
tiles she was scrubbing. Like lightning she knew her. Her brain
swung in a clamour of Where, where? and even in the
question she had the answer, for this was the girl she had seen
going into the Gaiety Theatre swinging on the arm of her big policeman.
The girl said Good morning to her in a kindly voice,
and Mary, with a swift, frightened glance, whispered back Good
morning; [111] then the girl went upstairs again, and Mary
continued to scrub the floor.
When the kitchen was finished and inspected and approved
of, she was instructed to wash out the front hall, and set about
the work at once.
Get it done as quickly as you can, said the
mistress; I am expecting my nephew here soon, and he dislikes
washing.
So Mary bent quickly to her work. She was not tired now.
Her hands moved swiftly up and down the floor without effort.
Indeed, her actions were almost mechanical. The self that was
thinking and probing seemed somehow apart from the body bending
over the bucket, and the hands that scrubbed and dipped and wrung.
She had finished about three-quarters of the hall when a couple
of sharp raps came to the door. Mrs. OConnor flew noiselessly
up from the kitchen.
I knew, said she bitterly, that you would
not be finished before he came. Dry that puddle at once, so that
he can walk in, and take the soap out of the way.
She stood with her hand on the door while Mary followed
these directions; then, [112] when a couple of hasty movements
had removed the surplus water, Mrs. OConnor drew the bolt
and her nephew entered. Mary knew him on the doorstep, and her
blood froze in terror and boiled again in shame.
Mrs. OConnor drew the big policeman inside and kissed
him.
I cant get these people to do things in time,
said she. They are that slow! Hang up your hat and coat
and come into the parlour.
The policeman, with his eyes fixed steadily on Mary, began
to take off his coat. His eyes, his moustache, all his face and
figure seemed to be looking at her. He was an enormous and terrifying
interrogation. He tapped his tough moustache and stepped over
the bucket; at the entrance to the parlour he stood again and
hung his monstrous look on her. He seemed about to speak, but
it was to Mrs. OConnor his words went.
Hows everything? said he; and then the
door closed behind him.
Mary, with extraordinary slowness, knelt down again beside
the bucket and began to scrub. She worked very deliberately, sometimes
[113] cleaning the same place two or three times. Now and again
she sighed, but without any consciousness of trouble. These were
sighs which did not seem to belong to her. She knew she was sighing,
but could not exactly see how the dull sounds came from her lips
when she had no desire to sigh and did not make any conscious
effort to do so. Her mind was an absolute blank; she could think
of nothing but the bubbles which broke on the floor and in the
bucket, and the way the water squeezed down from the cloth. There
was something she could have thought about if she wanted to, but
she did not want to.
Mrs. OConnor came out in a few minutes, inspected
the hall, and said it would do. She paid Mary her wages and told
her to come again the next day, and Mary went home. As she walked
along she was very careful not to step on any of the lines on
the pavement; she walked between these, and was distressed because
these lines were not equally distant from each other, so that
she had to make unequal paces as she went. [114]
Chap. XIX
THE NAME of the woman from next door was Mrs. Cafferty. She was
big and round, and when she walked her dress whirled about her
like a tempest. She seemed to be always turning round; when she
was going straight forward in any direction, say towards a press,
she would turn aside midway so sharply that her clothing spun
gustily in her wake - this probably came from having many children.
A mother is continually driving in oblique directions from her
household employments to rescue her children from a multitude
of perils. An infant and a fireplace act upon each other like
magnets; a small boy is always trying to eat a kettle or a piece
of coal or the backbone of a herring; a little girl and a slop-bucket
are in immediate contact; the baby has a knife in its mouth; the
twin [115] is on the point of swallowing a marble, or is trying
to wash itself in the butter, or the cat is about to take a nap
on its face. Indeed, the woman who has six children never knows
in what direction her next step must be, and the continual strain
of preserving her progeny converts many a one into regular cyclones
of eyes and arms and legs. It also induces in some a perpetual
good-humoured irritability wherein one can slap and cuddle a child
in the same instant, or shout threateningly or lovingly, call
warningly and murmur encouragingly in an astonishing sequence.
The woman with six children must both physically and mentally
travel at a tangent, and when a husband has to be badgered or
humoured into the bargain, then the life of such a woman is more
complex than is readily understood.
When Mary came home Mrs. Cafferty was sitting on her mothers
bed, two small children and a cat were also on the bed, two slightly
bigger children were under the bed, and two others were galloping
furiously up and down the room. At one moment these latter twain
were runaway horses, at another they were express trains. When
they were horses they snorted and neighed and kicked; [116] when
they were trains they backed and shunted, blew whistles and blew
off steam. The children under the bed were tigers in a jungle,
and they made the noises proper to such beasts and such a place;
they bit each other furiously, and howled and growled precisely
as tigers do. The pair of infants on the bed were playing the
game of bump; they would stand upright, then spring high into
the air, and come crashing down on the bed, which then sprung
them partly up again. Each time they jumped they screamed loudly,
each time they fell they roared delighted congratulations to each
other, and when they fell together they fought with strong good
humour. Sometimes they fell on Mrs. Makebelieve; always they bumped
her. At the side of the bed their mother sat telling with a gigantic
voice a story wherein her husbands sister figured as the
despicable person she was to the eye of discernment, and this
story was punctuated and shot through and dislocuted by objurgations,
threats, pleadings, admirations, alarms, and despairs addressed
to the children separately and en masse, by name, nickname,
and hastily created epithet. [117]
Mary halted in amazement in the doorway. She could not grasp
all the pandemonium at once, and while she stood Mrs. Cafferty
saw her.
Come on in, honey, said she. Your mas
as right as a trivet. All she wanted was a bit of good company
and some children to play with. Deed, she continued, children
are the best medicine for a woman that I know of. They dont
give you time to be sick, the creatures! Patrick John, Ill
give you a smack on the side of the head if you dont let
your little sister alone; and dont you, Norah, be vexing
him or youll deserve all you get. Run inside, Julia Elizabeth,
cut a slice of bread for the twins, and put a bit of sugar on
it, honey. Yes, Alanna, you can have a slice for yourself, too,
you poor child you, well you deserve it.
Mrs. Makebelieve was sitting up in the bed with two pillows
propping up her back. One of her long thin arms was stretched
out to preserve the twins from being bruised against the wall
in their play. Plainly they had become great friends with her,
for every now and then they swarmed over her, and a hugging match
of extreme complexity [118] ensued. She looked almost her usual
self, and all the animation which had been so marked a feature
of her personality had returned to her.
Are you better, mother? said Mary.
Mrs. Makebelieve took her daughters head in her hands
and kissed her until the twins butted them apart, clamouring for
caresses.
I am, honey, said she. Those children
done me good. I could have got up at one oclock, I felt
so well, but Mrs. Cafferty thought Id better not.
I did so, said Mrs. Cafferty. Not a foot
do you stir out of that bed till your daughter comes home, mam,
said I. For do you see, child, manys the time youd
be thinking you were well and feeling as fit as a fiddle, and
nothing would be doing you but to be up and gallivanting about,
and then the next day youd have a relapse, and the next
day youd be twice as bad, and the day after that theyd
be measuring you for your coffin maybe. I knew a woman was taken
like that - up she got; Im as well as ever I was,
said she, and she ate a feed of pigs cheek and cabbage and
finished her washing, [119] and they buried her in a week. Its
the quare thing sickness. What I say is, when youre sick
get into bed and stop there.
Its easy saying that, said Mrs. Makebelieve.
Sure, dont I know, you poor thing you,
said Mrs. Cafferty; but you should stay in bed as long as
you are able to, anyhow.
How did you get on with Mrs. OConnor?
said Mrs. Makebelieve.
Thats the mistress, isnt it? queried
Mrs. Cafferty; an ould devil, Ill bet you.
Mrs. Makebelieve rapidly and lightly sketched Mrs. OConnors
leading peculiarities.
Its queer the people one has to work for, God
knows it is, said Mrs. Cafferty.
At this point a grave controversy on work might have arisen,
but the children, caring little for conversation, broke into so
tumultuous play that talk could not be proceeded with. Mary was
enticed into a game composed in part of pussy-four-corners and
tip-and-tig, with a general flavour of leap-frog working through.
In five minutes her hair and her stockings were both down, and
the back of her skirt had crawled three-quarters round to the
front. The twins shouted and [120] bumped on the bed, upon which
and on Mrs. Makebelieve they rubbed bread and butter and sugar,
while their mother roared an anecdote at Mrs. Makebelieve in tones
that ruled the din as a fog-horn rules the waves. [121]
Chap. XX
MARY HAD LAVISHED the entire of her first days wages on
delicate foods wherewith to tempt her mothers languid appetite,
and when the morning dawned she arose silently, lit the fire,
wet the tea, and spread her purchases out on the side of the bed.
There was a slice of brawn, two pork sausages, two eggs, three
rashers of bacon, a bun, a pennyworth of sweets, and a pigs
foot. These with bread and butter and tea made a collection amid
which an invalid might browse with some satisfaction. Mary then
awakened her, and sat by in a dream of happiness watching her
mothers eye roll slowly and unbelievingly from item to item.
Mrs. Makebelieve tipped each article with her first finger and
put its right name on it unerringly. Then she picked out an important-looking
sweet that had four [122] colours and shone like the sun, and
put it in her mouth.
I never saw anything like it, you good child you,
said she.
Mary rocked herself to and fro and laughed loudly for delight,
and then they ate a bit of everything, and were very happy.
Mrs. Makebelieve said that she felt altogether better that
morning. She had slept like a top all through the night, and,
moreover, had a dream wherein she saw her brother Patrick standing
on the remotest sea point of distant America, from whence he had
shouted loudly across the ocean that he was coming back to Ireland
soon, that he had succeeded very well indeed, and that he was
not married. He had not changed in the slightest degree, said
Mrs. Makebelieve, and he looked as young and as jolly as when
he was at home with her father and herself in the County Meath
twenty-two years before. This mollifying dream and the easy sleep
which followed it had completely restored her health and spirits.
Mrs. Makebelieve further intimated that she intended to go to
work that day. It did not fit in with her ideas of propriety that
her child should turn into [123] a charwoman, the more particularly
as there was a strong - an almost certain - possibility of an
early betterment of her own and her daughters fortunes.
Dreams, said Mrs. Makebelieve, did not come for nothing.
There was more in dreams than was generally understood. Many and
many were the dreams which she herself had been visited by, and
they had come true so often that she could no longer disregard
their promises, admonishments, or threats. Of course many people
had dreams which were of no consequence, and these could usually
be traced to gluttony or a flighty, inconstant imagination. Drunken
people, for instance, often dreamed strange and terrible things,
but, even while they were awake, these people were liable to imaginary
enemies whom their clouded eyes and intellects magnified beyond
any thoughtful proportions, and when they were asleep their dreams
would also be subject to this haze and whirl of unreality and
hallucination.
Mary said that sometimes she did not dream at all, and at
other times she dreamed very vividly, but usually could not remember
what the dream had been about when she awakened; [124] and once
she had dreamed that some one gave her a shilling which she placed
carefully under her pillow, and this dream was so real that in
the morning she put her hand under the pillow to see if the shilling
was there, but it was not. The very next night she dreamed the
same dream, and as she put the phantom money under her pillow
she said out loudly to herself, I am dreaming this, and
I dreamt it last night also. Her mother said if she had
dreamt it for the third time some one would have given her a shilling
surely. To this Mary agreed, and admitted that she had tried very
hard to dream it on the third night, but somehow could not do
it.
When my brother comes home from America, said
Mrs. Makebelieve, well go away from this part of the
city at once. I suppose hed want a rather big house on the
south side - Rathfarnham or Terenure way, or, maybe, Donnybrook.
Of course hell ask me to mind the house for him, and keep
the servants in order, and provide a different dinner every day,
and all that; while you could go out to the neighbours places
to play lawn-tennis or cricket, and have lunch. It will be a very
great responsibility. [125]
What kind of dinners would you have? said Mary.
Mrs. Makebelieves eyes glistened, and she leaned forward
in the bed; but just as she was about to reply the labouring man
in the next room slammed his door, and went thundering down the
stairs. In an instant Mrs. Makebelieve bounded from her bed; three
wide twists put up her hair; eight strange, billow-like movements
put on her clothes; as each article of clothing reached a definite
point on her person Mary stabbed it swiftly with a pin - four
ordinary pins in this place, two safety-pins in that: then Mrs.
Makebelieve kissed her daughter sixteen times, and fled down the
stairs and away to her work. [126]
Chap. XXI
IN A FEW MINUTES Mrs. Cafferty came into the room. She was, as
every woman is in the morning, primed with conversation about
husbands; for in the morning husbands are unwieldy, morose creatures
without joy, without lightness, lacking even the common, elemental
interest in their own children, and capable of detestably misinterpreting
the conversation of their wives. It is only by mixing amongst
other men that this malignant humour may be dispelled. To them
the company of men is like a great bath into which a husband will
plunge wildly, renouncing as he dives wife and children, all anchors
and securities of hearth and roof, and from which he again emerges
singularly refreshed and capable of being interested by a wife,
a family, and a home until the next morning. To many [127] women
this is a grievance amounting often to an affront, and although
they endeavour, even by cooking, to heal the singular breach,
they are utterly unable to do so, and perpetually seek the counsel
of each other on the subject. Mrs. Cafferty had merely asked her
husband would he hold the baby while she poured out his stirabout,
and he had incredibly threatened to pour the stirabout down the
back of her neck if she didnt leave him alone.
It was upon this morning madness she had desired to consult
her friend, and when she saw that Mrs. Makebelieve had gone away
her disappointment was quite evident. But this was only for a
moment. Almost all women are possessed of a fine social sense
in relation to other women. They are always on their best behaviour
towards one another. Indeed, it often seems as if they feared
and must by all possible means placate each other by flattery,
humour, or a serious tactfulness. There is very little freedom
between them, because there is no real freedom or acquaintance
but between things polar. There is nothing but a superficial resemblance
between like and like, but between like and unlike [128] there
is space wherein both curiosity and spirit may go adventuring.
Extremes must meet, it is their urgent necessity, the reason for
their distance, and the greater the distance between them the
swifter will be their return and the warmer their impact: they
may shatter each other to fragments, or they may fuse and become
indissoluble and new and wonderful, but there is no other fertility.
Between the sexes there is a really extraordinary freedom of intercourse.
They meet each other something more than half-way. A man and a
woman may become quite intimate in a quarter of an hour. Almost
certainly they will endeavour to explain themselves to each other
before many minutes have elapsed; but a man and a man will not
do this, and even less so will a woman and a woman, for these
are the parallel lines which never meet. The acquaintanceship
of the latter, in particular, often begins and ends in an armed
and calculating neutrality. They preserve their distances and
each others sufferance by the exercise of a grave social
tact which never deserts them, and which more than anything else
has contributed to build the ceremonials which are nearly one-half
of our civilisation. [129]
It is a common belief amongst men that women cannot live
together without quarrelling, and that they are unable to get
work done by other women with any of the good will which men display
in the same occupations. If this is true, the reason should not
be looked for in any intersexual complications, such as fear or
an acrid rivalry, but only in the perpetually recurring physical
disturbances to which, as a sex, they are subjected; and as the
ability and willingness of a man to use his fists in response
to an affront has imposed sobriety and good humour towards each
other in almost all their relations, so women have placed barriers
of politeness and ceremonial between their fellow-women and their
own excoriated sensibilities.
Mrs. Cafferty, therefore, dissembled her disappointment,
and with an increased cordiality addressed herself towards Mary.
Sitting down on the bedside, she discoursed on almost every subject
upon which a woman may discourse. It is considered that the conversation
of women, while incessant in its use, is rigorously bounded between
the parlour and the kitchen, or, to be more precise, between the
attic and the scullery; but these extremes [130] are more inclusive
than is imagined, for the attic has an outlook on the stars while
the scullery usually opens on the kitchen garden or the dust-heap
- vistas equal to horizons. The mysteries of death and birth occupy
women far more than is the case with men, to whom political and
mercantile speculations are more congenial. With immediate buying
and selling, and all the absolute forms of exchange and barter,
women are deeply engaged, so that the realities of trade are often
more intelligible to them than to many merchants. If men understood
domestic economy half as well as women do, then their political
economy and their entire consequent statecraft would not be the
futile muddle which it is.
It was all very interesting to Mary, and, moreover, she
had a great desire for companionship at the moment. If she had
been left alone it might have become necessary to confront certain
thoughts, memories, pictures, from which she had a dim idea it
would be wise to keep her distance. Her work on the previous day,
the girl she had met in the house, the policeman - from all or
any of these recollections she swerved mentally. She steadily
rejected all impressions that touched [131 upon these. The policeman
floated vaguely on her consciousness not as a desirable person,
not even as a person, but as a distance, as an hour of her childhood,
as a half-forgotten quaintness, a memory which it would be better
should never be revived. Indeed, her faint thought shadowed him
as a person who was dead, and would never again be visible to
her anywhere. So, resolutely, she let him drop down into her mind
to some uncomfortable oubliette from whence he threatened with
feeble insistence to pop up at any moment like a strange question
or a sudden shame. She hid him in a rosy flush which a breath
could have made flame unbearably, and she hid from him behind
the light garrulity of Mrs. Cafferty, through which now and again,
as through a veil, she saw the spike of his helmet, a wiry, bristling
moustache, a surge of great shoulders. On these ghostly indications
she heaped a tornado of words which swamped the wraith, but she
knew he was waiting to catch her alone, and would certainly catch
her, and the knowledge made her hate him. [132]
Chap. XXII
MRS. CAFFERTY suggested that she and Mary should go out together
to purchase that days dinner, and by the time she had draped
her shoulders in a shawl, buried her head in a bonnet, cautioned
all her brood against going near the fireplace, the coal-box,
and the slop-bucket, cut a slice of bread for each of them, and
placed each of them in charge of all the rest, Marys more
elaborate dressing was within two stages of her hat.
Wait until you have children, my dear, said
Mrs. Cafferty, you wont be so pernickety then.
She further told Mary that when she was herself younger she had
often spent an hour and a half doing up her hair, and she had
been so particular that the putting on of a blouse or the pinning
of a skirt to a belt had tormented her happily for two hours.
[133] But, bless you, she roared, you get out
of all that when you get children. Wait till you have six of them
to be dressed every morning, and they with some of their boots
lost and the rest of them mixed up, and each of them wriggling
like an eel on a pan until you have to slap the devil out of them
before their stocking can be got on: the way they screw their
toes up in the wrong places and the way they squeal that youre
pinching them! and the way that they say youve rubbed soap
in their eyes! - Mrs. Cafferty lifted her eyes and her hands
to the ceiling in a dumb remonstrance with Providence, and dropped
them again forlornly as one in whom Providence had never been
really interested youll have all the dressing you
want, and a bit over for luck, said she.
She complimented Mary on her hair, her complexion, the smallness
of her feet, the largeness of her eyes, the slenderness of her
waist, the width of her hat and of her shoestrings: so impartially
and inclusively did she compliment her that by the time they went
out Mary was rosy with appreciation and as self-confident as a
young girl is entitled to be. [134]
It was a beautiful grey day, with a massy sky which seemed
as if it never could move again or change, and, as often happens
in Ireland in cloudy weather, the air was so very clear that one
could see to a great distance. On such days everything stands
out in sharp outline. A street is no longer a congeries of houses
huddling shamefully together and terrified lest any one should
look at them and laugh. Each house then recaptures its individuality.
The very roadways are aware of themselves, and bear their horses
and cars and trams in a competent spirit, adorned with modesty
as with a garland. It has a beauty beyond sunshine, for sunshine
is only youth and carelessness. The impress of a thousand memories,
the historic visage, becomes apparent; the quiet face which experience
has ripened into knowledge and mellowed into the wisdom of charity
is seen then; the great social beauty shines from the streets
under this sky that broods like a thoughtful forehead.
While they walked Mrs. Cafferty planned, as a general might,
her campaign of shopping. Her shopping differed greatly from Mrs.
Makebelieves, and the difference was probably [135] caused
by her necessity to feed and clothe eight people as against Mrs.
Makebelieves two. Mrs. Makebelieve went to the shop nearest
her house, and there entered into a staunch personal friendship
with the proprietor. When she was given anything of doubtful value
or material she instantly returned and handed it back, and the
prices which were first quoted to her and settled upon became
to Mrs. Makebelieve an unalterable standard from which no departure
would be tolerated. Eggs might go up in price for the remainder
of the world, but not for her. A change of price threw Mrs. Makebelieve
into so wide-eyed, so galvanic, so powerfully-verbal and friendship-shattering
an anger that her terms were accepted and registered as Median
exactitudes. Mrs. Cafferty, on the other hand, knew shopkeepers
as personal enemies and as foes to the human race, who were bent
on despoiling the poor, and against whom a remorseless warfare
should be conducted by all decent people. Her knowledge of material,
of quality, of degrees of freshness, of local and distant prices
was profound. In Clanbrassil Street she would quote the prices
of Moore Street [136] with shattering effect, and if the shopkeeper
declined to revise his tariff her good-humoured voice toned so
huge a disapproval that other intending purchasers left the shop
impressed by the unmasking of a swindler. Her method was abrupt.
She seized an article, placed it on the counter, and uttered these
words, Sixpence and not a penny more; I can get it in Moore
Street for fivepence halfpenny. She knew all the shops having
a cheap line in some special article, and, therefore, her shopping
was of a very extended description; not that she went from point
to point, for she continually departed from the line of battle
with the remark, Lets try what they have here,
and when inside the shop her large eye took in at a glance a thousand
details of stock and price which were never afterwards forgotten.
Mrs. Caffertys daughter, Nora, was going to celebrate
her first Communion in a few days. This is a very important ceremony
for a young girl and for her mother. A white muslin dress and
a blue sash, a white muslin hat with blue ribbons, tan shoes,
and stockings as germane to the colour of tan as may be - these
all have to be provided. It is a time of [137] grave concern for
everybody intimately connected with the event. Every girl in the
world has performed this ceremony: they have all been clad in
these garments and shoes, and for a day or so all women, of whatever
age, are in love with the little girl making her first Communion.
Perhaps more than anything else it swings the passing stranger
back to the time when she was not a woman but a child with present
gaiety and curiosity, and a future all expectation and adventure.
Therefore, the suitable apparelling of ones daughter is
a public duty, and every mother endeavours to do the thing that
is right, and live, if only for one day, up to the admiration
of her fellow-creatures.
It was a trial, but an enjoyable one, to Mrs. Cafferty and
Mary this matching of tan stockings with tan shoes. The shoes
were bought, and then an almost impossible quest began to find
stockings which would exactly go with them. Thousands of boxes
were opened, ransacked, and waved aside without the absolute colour
being discovered. From shop to shop and from street to street
they went, and the quest led them through Grafton Street en
route to a shop where, [138] months before, Mrs. Cafferty
had seen stockings of a colour so nearly approximating to tan
that they almost might be suitable.
As they went past the College and entered the winding street
Marys heart began to beat. She did not see any of the traffic
flowing up and down, or the jostling, busy foot-passengers, nor
did she hear the eager lectures of her companion. Her eyes were
straining up the street towards the crossing. She dared not turn
back or give any explanation to Mrs. Cafferty, and in a few seconds
she saw him, gigantic, calm, the adequate monarch of his world.
His back was turned to her, and the great sweep of his shoulders,
his solid legs, his red neck, and close-cropped, wiry hair were
visible to her strangely. She had a peculiar feeling of acquaintness
and of aloofness, intimate knowledge and a separation of sharp
finality, caused her to stare at him with so intent a curiosity
that Mrs. Cafferty noticed it.
Thats a fine man, said she; he wont
have to go about looking for girls.
As she spoke they passed by the policeman, and Mary knew
that when her eyes left him his gaze almost automatically fell
upon her. [139] She was glad that he could not see her face. She
was glad that Mrs. Cafferty was beside her: had she been alone
she would have been tempted to walk away very quickly, almost
to run, but her companion gave her courage and self-possession,
so that she walked gallantly. But her mind was a fever. She could
feel his eyes raking her from head to foot; she could see his
great hand going up to tap his crinkly moustache. These things
she could see in her terrified mind, but she could not think,
she could only give thanks to God because she had her best clothes
on. [140]
Chap. XXIII
MRS. MAKEBELIEVE was planning to get back such of her furniture
and effects as had been pawned during her illness. Some of these
things she had carried away from her fathers house many
years before when she got married. They had been amongst the earliest
objects on which her eyes had rested when she was born, and around
them her whole life of memories revolved: a chair in which her
father had sat, and on the edge whereof her husband had timidly
balanced himself when he came courting her, and into which her
daughter had been tied when she was a baby. A strip, of carpet
and some knives and forks had formed portion of her wedding presents.
She loved these things, and had determined that if work could
retrieve them they should not be lost for ever. Therefore, she
had to [141] suffer people like Mrs. OConnor, not gladly,
but with the resignation due to the hests of Providence which
one must obey but may legitimately criticise. Mrs. Makebelieve
said definitely that she detested the woman. She was a cold-eyed
person whose only ability was to order about other people who
were much better than she was. It distressed Mrs. Makebelieve
to have to work for such a person, to be subject to her commands
and liable to her reproofs or advice; these were things which
seemed to her to be out of all due proportion. She did not wish
the woman any harm, but some day or other she would undoubtedly
have to put her in her proper place. It was a day to which she
looked forward. Any one who had a sufficient income could have
a house and could employ and pay for outside help without any
particular reason for being proud, and many people, having such
an income, would certainly have a better appointed house and would
be more generous and civil to those who came to work for them.
Everybody, of course, could not have a policeman for a nephew,
and there were a great many people who would rather not have anything
to do with a policeman at all. [142] Overbearing, rough creatures
to whom everybody is a thief! If Mrs. Makebelieve had such a nephew
she would certainly have wrecked his pride - the great beast!
Here Mrs. Makebelieve grew very angry: her black eyes blazed,
her great nose grew thin and white, and her hands went leaping
in fury. Youre not in Court now, you jackanapes
you, said I - with his whiskers, and his baton, and his
feet that were bigger than anything in the world except his ignorant
self-conceit. Have you a daughter, mam? said
he. Whats her age, mam? said he. Is
she a good girl, mam? said he. But she had settled
him. And that woman was prouder of him than a king would
be of his crown! Never mind, said Mrs. Make-believe, and
she darted fiercely up and down the room, tearing pieces off the
atmosphere and throwing them behind her.
In a few minutes, however, she sat down on the floor and
drew her daughters head to her breast, and then, staring
into the scrap of fire, she counselled Mary wisely on many affairs
of life and the conduct of a girl under all kinds of circumstances
- to be adequate in spirit if not in physique: that was her theme.
143] Never be a servant in your heart, said she. To work is nothing;
the king on his throne, the priest kneeling before the Holy Altar,
all people in all places had to work, but no person at all need
be a servant. One worked and was paid, and went away keeping the
integrity of ones soul unspotted and serene. If an employer
was wise or good or kind, Mrs. Makebelieve was prepared to accord
such a person instant and humble reverence. She would work for
such a one until the nails dropped off her fingers and her feet
crumpled up under her body; but a policeman, or a rich person,
or a person who ordered one about ... until she died and was buried
in the depths of the world, she would never give in to such a
person or admit anything but their thievishness and ill-breeding.
Bad manners to the like of them! said she, and might have sailed
boisterously away upon an ocean of curses, but that Mary turned
her face closer to her breast and began to speak.
For suddenly there had come to Mary a vision of peace: like
a green island in the sea it was, like a white cloud on a broiling
day; the sheltered life where all mundane preoccupations were
far away, where ambition [144] and hope and struggle were incredibly
distant foolishness. Lowly and peaceful and unjaded was that life:
she could see the nuns pacing quietly in their enclosed gardens,
fingering their beads as they went to and fro and praying noiselessly
for the sins of the world, or walking with solemn happiness to
the Chapel to praise God in their own small companies, or going
with hidden feet through the great City to nurse the sick and
comfort those who had no other comforter than God - To pray in
a quiet place, and not to be afraid any more or doubtful or despised
...! These things she saw and her heart leaped to them, and of
these things she spoke to her mother, who listened with a tender
smile and stroked her hair and hands. But her mother did not approve
of these things. She spoke of nuns with reverence and affection.
Many a gentle, sweet woman had she known of that sisterhood, many
a one before whom she could have abased herself with tears and
love, but such a life of shelter and restraint could never have
been hers, nor did she believe it could be Marys. For her
a womans business was life; the turmoil and strife of it
was good to be in; it was a cleansing and a [145] bracing. God
did not need any assistance, but man did, bitterly he wanted it,
and the giving of such assistance was the proper business of a
woman. Everywhere there was a man to be helped, and the quest
of a woman was to find the man who most needed her aid, and having
found, to cleave to him for ever. In most of the trouble of life
she divined men and women not knowing or not doing their duty,
which was to love one another and to be neighbourly and obliging
to their fellows. A partner, a home and children - through the
loyal co-operation of these she saw happiness and, dimly, a design
of so vast an architecture as scarcely to be discussed. The bad
and good of humanity moved her to an equal ecstasy of displeasure
and approbation, but her God was Freedom and her religion Love.
Freedom! even the last rags of it that remain to a regimented
world! That was a passion with her. She must order her personal
life without any ghostly or bodily supervision. She would oppose
an encroachment on that with her nails and her teeth; and this
last fringe of freedom was what nuns had sacrificed and all servants
and other people had bartered away. One must [146] work, but one
must never be a slave - these laws seemed to her equally imperative;
the structure of the world swung upon them, and whoever violated
these laws was a traitor to both God and man.
But Mary did not say anything. Her mothers arms were
around her, and suddenly she commenced to cry upon a bosom that
was not strange. There was surely healing in that breast of love,
a rampart of tenderness against the world, a door which would
never be closed against her or opened to her enemies. [147]
Chap. XXIV
IN A LITTLE city like Dublin one meets every person whom one knows
within a few days. Around each bend in the road there is a friend,
an enemy, or a bore striding towards you, so that, with a piety
which is almost religious, one says touch wood before
turning any corner. It was not long, therefore, until Mary again
met the big policeman. He came up behind her and walked by her
side, chatting with a pleasant ease, in which, however, her curious
mind could discover some obscure distinctions. On looking backwards
it seemed to Mary that he had always come from behind her, and
the retrospect dulled his glory to the diminishing point. For
indeed his approach was too consistently policeman-like, it was
too crafty; his advent hinted at a gross espionage, at a mind
which was no longer a [148] mans but a detectives,
who tracked everybody by instinct, and arrested his friends instead
of saluting them.
As they walked along Mary was in a fever of discomfort.
She wished dumbly that the man would go away, but for the wealth
of the world she could not have brought herself to hurt the feelings
of so big a man. To endanger the very natural dignity of a big
man was a thing which no woman could do without a pang; the shame
of it made her feel hot: he might have blushed or stammered, and
the memory of that would sting her miserably for weeks as though
she had insulted an elephant or a baby.
She could not get away from him. She had neither the courage
nor the experience which enables a woman to dismiss a man without
wounding him, and so, perforce, she continued walking by his side
while he treated her to an intelligent dissertation on current
political events and the topography of the City of Dublin.
But, undoubtedly, there was a change in the policeman, and
it was not difficult to account for. He was more easy and familiar
in his speech: while formerly he had bowed as from [149] the peaks
of manly intellect to the pleasant valleys of girlish incompetence,
he now condescended from the loftiness of a policeman and a person
of quality to the quaint gutters of social inferiority. To many
people mental inferiority in a companion has a charm, for it induces
in ones proper person a feeling of philosophic detachment,
a fine effect of personal individuality and superiority which
is both bracing and uplifting - there is not any particular harm
in this: progress can be, and is, accelerated by the hypocrisies
and snobbishness, all the minor, unpleasant adjuncts of mediocrity.
Snobbishness is a puling infant, but it may grow to a deeply whiskered
ambition, and most virtues are, on examination, the amalgam of
many vices. But while intellectual poverty may be forgiven and
loved, social inequality can only be utilised. Our fellows, however
addled, are our friends, our inferiors are our prey, and since
the policeman had discovered Mary publicly washing out an alien
hall his respect for her had withered and dropped to death almost
in an instant; whence it appears that there is really only one
grave and debasing vice in the world, and that is poverty. [150]
In many little ways the distinction and the difference were
apparent to Mary. The dignity of a gentleman and a man of the
world was partly shorn away: the gentleman portion, which comprised
kindness and reticence, had vanished; the man of the world remained,
typified by a familiarity which assumed that this and that, understood
but not to be mentioned, shall be taken for granted; a spurious
equalisation perched jauntily but insecurely on a non-committal,
and that base flattery which is the only coin wherewith a thief
can balance his depredations. For as they went pacing down a lonely
road towards the Dodder the policeman diversified his entertaining
lore by a succession of compliments which ravaged the heavens
and the earth and the deep sea for a fitting symbology. Marys
eyes and the gay heavens were placed in juxtaposition and the
heavens were censured, the vegetable, animal, and mineral worlds
were discomfited, the deep sea sustained a reproof, and the by-products
of nature and of art drooped into a nothingness too vast even
for laughter. Mary had not the slightest objection to hearing
that all the other women in the world seemed cripples[151] and
gargoyles when viewed against her own transcendent splendour,
and she was prepared to love the person who said this innocently
and happily. She would have agreed to be an angel or a queen to
a man demanding potentates and powers in his sweetheart, and would
joyfully have equalised matters by discovering the buried god
in her lover and believing in it as sincerely as he permitted
- But this man was not saying the truth. She could see him making
the things up as he talked. There was eagerness in him, but no
spontaneity. It was not even eagerness, it was greediness: he
wanted to eat her up and go away with her bones sticking out of
his mouth as the horns of a deer protrude from the jaws of an
anaconda, veritable evidence to it and his fellows of a victory
and an orgy to command respect and envy. But he was familiar,
he was complacent, and - amazedly she discovered it - he was big.
Her vocabulary could not furnish her with the qualifying word,
or rather epithet, for his bigness. Horrible was suggested and
retained, but her instinct clamoured that there was a fat, oozy
word somewhere which would have brought comfort to her brains
and her hands and feet. [152] He did not keep his arms quiet,
but tapped his remarks into her blouse and her shoulder. Each
time his hands touched her they remained a trifle longer. They
seemed to be great red spiders, they would grip her all round
and squeeze her clammily while his face spiked her to death with
its moustache ... And he smiled also, he giggled and cut capers;
his language now was a perpetual witticism at which he laughed
in jerks, and at which she laughed tightly like an obedient, quick
echo: and then, suddenly, without a word, in a dazing flash, his
arms were about her. There was nobody in sight at all, and he
was holding her like a great spider, and his bristly moustache
darted forward to spike her to death, and then, somehow, she was
free, away from him, scudding down the road lightly and fearfully
and very swiftly. Wait, wait, he called - wait!
But she did not wait. [153]
Chap. XXV
MRS. CAFFERTY came in that evening for a chat with Mrs. Makebelieve.
There were traces of worry on the ladys face, and she hushed
the children who trooped in her wake with less of good humour
than they were accustomed to. Instead of threatening to smack
them on the head, as was usual, she did smack them, and she walked
surrounded by lamentations as by a sea.
Things were not going at all well with her. There was a
slackness in her husbands trade; so that for days together
he was idle, and although the big woman amended her expenditure
in every direction she could not by any means adjust eight robust
appetites to a shrunken income. She explained her position to
Mrs. Makebelieve: - Children would not, they could not, consent
to go on [154] shorter rations than they had been accustomed to,
and it seemed to her that daily, almost hourly, their appetites
grew larger and more terrible. She showed her right hand whereon
the mere usage of a bread-knife had scored a ridge which was now
a permanent disfigurement.
God bless me, she shouted angrily, what
right have I to ask the creatures to go hungry? Am I to beat them
when they cry? Its not their fault that they want food,
and its not my poor mans fault that they havent
any. Hes ready to work at his trade if anybody wants him
to do so, and if he cant get work, and if the children are
hungry, whose fault is it?
Mrs. Cafferty held that there was something wrong somewhere,
but whether the blame was to be allocated to the weather, the
employer, the Government, or the Deity, she did not know, nor
did Mrs. Makebelieve know; but they were agreed that there was
an error somewhere, a lack of adjustment with which they had nothing
to do, but the effects whereof were grievously visible in their
privations. Meantime it had become necessary that Mrs. Cafferty
should adjust herself [155] to a changing environment. A rise
or fall in wages is automatically followed by a similar enlargement
or shrinkage of ones necessities, and the consequent difference
is registered at all points of ones life-contact. The physical
and mental activities of a well-to-do person can reach out to
a horizon, while those of very poor people are limited to their
immediate, stagnant atmosphere, and so the lives of a vast portion
of society are liable to a ceaseless change, a flux swinging from
good to bad for ever, an expansion and constriction against which
they have no safeguards and not even any warning. In free nature
this problem is paralleled by the shrinking and expansion of the
seasons; the summer with its wealth of food, the winter following
after with its famine; but many wild creatures are able to make
a thrifty provision against the bad time which they know comes
as certainly and periodically as the good time. Bees and squirrels
and many others fill their barns with the plentiful overplus of
the summer fields; birds can migrate and find sunshine and sustenance
elsewhere; and others again can store during their good season
a life energy by means whereof they may sleep healthily through
their hard [156] times. These organisations can be adjusted to
their environments because the changes of the latter are known
and can be more or less accurately predicted from any point. But
the human worker has no such regularity. His food period does
not ebb and recur with the seasons. There is no periodicity in
their changes, and, therefore, no possibility for defensive or
protective action. His physical structure uses and excretes energy
so rapidly that he cannot store it up and go to sleep on his savings,
and his harvests are usually so lean and disconnected that the
exercise of thrift is equally an impossibility and a mockery.
The life, therefore, of such a person is composed of a constant
series of adjustments and readjustments, and the stern ability
wherewith these changes are met and combated are more admirably
ingenious than the much-praised virtues of ants and bees to which
they are constantly directed as to exemplars.
Mrs. Cafferty had now less money than she had been used
to, but she had still the same rent to pay, the same number of
children to feed, and the same personal dignity to support as
in her better days, and her problem [157] was to make up, by some
means to which she was a stranger, the money which had drifted
beyond the reach of her husband. The methods by which she could
do this were very much restricted. Children require an attention
which occupies the entire of a mothers time, and, consequently,
she was prevented from seeking abroad any mitigation of her hardships.
The occupations which might be engaged in at home were closed
to her by mere overwhelming competition. The number of women who
are prepared to make ten million shirts for a penny is already
far in excess of the demand, and so, except by a severe undercutting
such as a contract to make twenty million shirts for a halfpenny,
work of this description is very difficult to obtain.
Under these circumstances nothing remained for Mrs. Cafferty
but to take in a lodger. This is a form of co-operation much practised
among the poorer people. The margin of direct profit accruing
from such a venture is very small, but this is compensated for
by the extra spending power achieved. A number of people pooling
their money in this way can buy to greater advantage and in a
[158] cheaper market than is possible to the solitary purchaser,
and a moderate toll for wear and tear and usage, or, as it is
usually put, for rent and attendance, gives the small personal
profit at which such services are reckoned.
Through the good offices of a neighbouring shopkeeper Mrs.
Cafferty had secured a lodger, and, with the courage which is
never separate from despair, she had rented a small room beside
her own. This room, by an amazing economy of construction, contained
a fireplace and a window: it was about one square inch in diameter,
and was undoubtedly a fine room. The lodger was to enter into
possession on the following day, and Mrs. Cafferty said he was
a very nice young man indeed and did not drink. 159]
Chap. XXVI
MRS. CAFFERTYS lodger duly arrived. He was young and as
thin as a lath, and he moved with fury. He was seldom in the place
at all: he fled into the house for his food, and having eaten
it, he fled away from the house again, and did not reappear until
it was time to go to bed. What he did with himself in the interval
Mrs. Cafferty did not know, but she was prepared to wager her
soul, the value of which she believed was high, on the fact that
he was a good young man who never gave the slightest trouble,
saving that his bedclothes were always lying on the floor in the
morning, that there was candle grease on one corner of his pillow,
and that he cleaned his boots on a chair. But these were things
which one expected a young man to do, and the omission of them
might [160] have caused one to look curiously at the creature
and to doubt his masculinity.
Mrs. Makebelieve replied that habits of order and neatness
were rarely to be found in young people of either sex; more especially
were these absent in boys who are released in early youth by their
mothers from all purely domestic employments. A great many people
believed, and she believed herself, that it was not desirable
a man or boy should conform too rigidly to household rules. She
had observed that the comfort of a home was lost to many men if
they were expected to take their boots off when they came into
the house, or to hang their hats up in a special place. The women
of a household, being so constantly indoors, find it easy and
businesslike to obey the small rules which comprise household
legislation, but as the entire policy of a house was to make it
habitable and comfortable for its men folk, all domestic ordinances
might be strained to the uttermost until the compromise was found
to mollify even exceptional idiosyncrasies. A man, she held, bowed
to quite sufficient discipline during his working hours, and his
home should be a place free from every vexatious [161] restraint
and wherein he might enjoy as wide a liberty as was good for him.
These ideas were applauded by Mrs. Cafferty, and she supplemented
them by a recital of how she managed her own husband, and of the
ridiculous ease whereby any man may be governed; for she had observed
that men were very susceptible to control if only the control
was not too apparent. If a man did a thing twice, the doing of
that thing became a habit and a passion, any interference with
which provoked him to an unreasoning, bull-like wrath wherein
both wives and crockery were equally shattered; and, therefore,
a woman had only to observe the personal habits of her beloved
and fashion her restrictions according to that standard. This
meant that men made the laws and women administered them - a wise
allocation of prerogatives, for she conceived that the executive
female function was every whit as important as the creative faculty
which brought these laws into being. She was quite prepared to
leave the creative powers in male hands if they would equally
abstain from interference with the subsequent working details,
for she was of opinion that in [162] the pursuit of comfort (not
entirely to their credit was it said) men were far more anxiously
concerned than were women, and they flew to their bourne with
an instinct for short cuts wherewith women were totally unacquainted.
But in the young man who had come to lodge with her Mrs.
Cafferty discerned a being in whom virtue had concentrated to
a degree that almost amounted to a congestion. He had instantly
played with the children on their being presented to him: this
was the sign of a good nature. Before he was acquainted with her
ten minutes he had made four jokes: this was the sign of a pleasant
nature; and he sang loudly and unceasingly when he awoke in the
morning, which was the unfailing index to a happy nature. Moreover,
he ate the meals provided for him without any of that particular,
tedious examination which is so insulting, and had complimented
Mrs. Cafferty on an ability to put a taste on food which she was
pleased to obtain recognition of.
Both Mary and her mother remarked on these details with
an admiration which was as much as either politeness or friendship
could [163] expect. Mrs. Makebelieves solitary method of
life had removed her so distantly from youth that information
about a young man was almost tonic to her. She had never wished
for a second husband, but had often fancied that a son would have
been a wonderful joy to her. She considered that a house which
had no young man growing up in it was not a house at all, and
she believed that a boy would love his mother, if not more than
a daughter could, at least with a difference which would be strangely
sweet - a rash, impulsive, unquiet love; a love which would continually
prove her love to the breaking point; a love that demanded, and
demanded with careless assurance, that accepted her goodness as
unquestioningly as she accepted the fertility of the earth, and
used her knowing blindly and flatteringly how inexhaustively rich
her depths were ... She could have wept for this; it was priceless
beyond kingdoms; the smile on a boys face lifted her to
an exaltation. Her girl was inexpressibly sweet, surely an island
in her wide heart, but a little boy ... her breasts could have filled
with milk for him, him she could have nourished in the rocks and
in desert places: [164] he would have been life to her and adventure,
a barrier against old age, an incantation against sorrow, a fragrance
and a grief and a defiance ...
It was quite plain that Mrs. Cafferty was satisfied with
this addition to her household, but the profit which she had expected
to accrue from his presence was not the liberal one she had in
mind when making the preliminary arrangements. For it appeared
that the young man had an appetite of which Mrs. Cafferty spoke
with the respect proper to something colossal and awesome. A half-loaf
did not more than break the back of a hunger which could wriggle
disastrously over another half-loaf: so that, instead of being
relieved by his advent, she was confronted by a more immediate
and desolating bankruptcy than that from which she had attempted
to escape. Exactly how to deal with this situation she did not
know, and it was really in order to discuss her peculiar case
that she had visited Mrs. Makebelieve. She could, of course, have
approached the young man and demanded from him an increase of
money that would still be equitable to both parties, but she confessed
a repugnance to this course. She [165] did not like to upbraid
or trouble any one on account of an appetite which was so noteworthy.
She disliked, in any event, to raise a question about food: her
instinct for hospitality was outraged at the thought, and as she
was herself the victim, or the owner, of an appetite which had
often placed a strain on her revenues, a fellow-feeling operated
still further in mitigation of his disqualification.
Mrs. Makebelieves advice was that she should stifle
the first fierce and indiscriminate cravings of the young mans
hunger by a liberal allowance of stirabout, which was a cheap,
wholesome, and very satisfying food, and in that way his destruction
of more costly victuals would be kept within reasonable limits.
Appetite, she held, was largely a matter of youth, and as a boy
who was scarcely done growing had no way of modifying his passion
for nourishment, it would be a lapse from decency to insult him
on so legitimate a failing.
Mrs. Cafferty thought that this might be done, and thanked
her friend for the counsel; but Mary, listening to these political
matters, conceived Mrs. Cafferty as a person who had no longer
any claim to honour, and she pitied [166] the young man whose
appetite was thus publicly canvassed, and who might at any moment
be turned out of house and home on account of a hunger against
which he had no safeguard and no remedy. [167]
Chap. XXVII
IT WAS NOT LONG long until Mary and Mrs. Caffertys lodger
met. As he came in by the hall-door one day Mary was carrying
upstairs a large water-bucket, the portage of which two or three
times a day is so heavy a strain on the dweller in tenements.
The youth instantly seized the bucket, and despite her protestations
and appeals, he carried it upstairs. He walked a few steps in
advance of Mary, whistling cheerfully as he went, so she was able
to get a good view of him. He was so thin that he nearly made
her laugh, but he carried the bucket, the weight of which she
had often bowed under, with an ease astonishing in so slight a
man, and there was a spring in his walk which was pleasant to
see. He laid the bucket down outside her room, and requested her
urgently to knock at his door [168] whenever she required more
water fetched, because he would be only too delighted to do it
for her, and it was not the slightest trouble in the world. While
he spoke he was stealing glances at her face and Mary was stealing
glances at his face, and when they caught one another doing this
at the same moment they both looked hurriedly away, and the young
man departed to his own place.
But Mary was very angry with this young man. She had gone
downstairs in her house attire, which was not resplendent, and
she objected to being discovered by any youth in raiment not suitable
to such an occasion. She could not visualise herself speaking
to a man unless she was adorned as for a festivity. The gentlemen
and ladies of whom her mother sometimes spoke, and of whom she
had often dreamt, were never mean in their habiliments. The gentlemen
frequently had green silken jackets with a foam of lace at the
wrists and a cascade of the same rich material brawling upon their
breasts, and the ladies were attired in a magnificent scarcity
of clothing, the fundamental principle whereof, although she was
quite assured of its righteousness, she did not yet understand.
[169]
Indeed, at this period Marys interest in dress far
transcended any interest she had ever known before. She knew intimately
the window contents of every costumiers shop in Grafton
and Wicklow and Dawson Streets, and could follow with intelligent
amazement the apparently trifling, but exceedingly important,
differences of line or seam or flounce which ranked one garment
as a creation and its neighbour as a dress. She and her mother
often discussed the gowns wherein the native dignity of their
souls might be adequately caparisoned. Mrs. Makebelieve, with
a humility which had still a trace of anger, admitted that the
period when she could have been expressed in colour had expired,
and she decided that a black silk dress, with a heavy gold chain
falling along the bosom, was as much as her soul was now entitled
to. She had an impatience, amounting to contempt, for those florid,
flamboyant souls whose outer physical integument so grievously
misrepresented them. She thought that after a certain time one
should dress the body and not the soul, and, discovering an inseparability
between the two, she held that the mean shrine must hold a [170]
very trifling deity and that an ill-made or time-worn body should
never dress gloriously under pain of an accusation of hypocrisy
or foolishness.
But for Mary she planned garments with a freedom and bravery
which astonished while it delighted her daughter. She combined
twenty styles into one style of terrifying originality. She conceived
dresses of a complexity beyond the labour of any but a divinely
inspired needle, and others again whose simplicity was almost
too tenuous for human speech. She discussed robes whose trailing
and voluminous richness could with difficulty be supported by
ten strong attendants, and she had heard of a dress the fabric
whereof was of such gossamer and ethereal insubstancy that it
might be packed into a walnut more conveniently than an ordinary
dress could be impressed into a portmanteau. Marys exclamations
of delight and longing ranged from every possible dress to every
impossible one, and then Mrs. Makebelieve reviewed all the dresses
she had worn from the age of three years to the present day, including
wedding and mourning dresses, those which were worn at picnics
and dances [171] and for travelling, with an occasional divergence
which comprehended the clothing of her friends and her enemies
during the like period. She explained the basic principles of
dress to her daughter, showing that in this art, as in all else,
order cannot be dispensed with. There were things a tall person
might wear, but which a short person might not, and the draperies
which adorned a portly lady were but pitiable weeds when trailed
by her attenuated sister. The effect of long, thin lines in a
fabric will make a short woman appear tall, while round, thick
lines can reduce the altitude of people whose height is a trouble
to be combated. She illustrated the usage of large and small checks
and plaids and all the mazy interweaving of other cloths, and
she elucidated the mystery of colour, tone, half-tone, light and
shade so interestingly that Mary could scarcely hear enough of
her lore. She was acquainted with the colours which a dark person
may wear and those which are suitable to a fair person, and the
shades proper to be used by the wide class ranging between these
extremes she knew also, with a special provision for red-haired
and sandy folk and [172] those who have no complexion at all.
Certain laws which she formulated were cherished by her daughter
as oracular utterances - that one should match ones eyes
in the house and ones hair in the street, was one; that
ones hat and gloves and shoes were of vastly more importance
than all the rest of ones clothing, was another; that ones
hair and stockings should tone as nearly as possible, was a third.
Following these rules, she assured her daughter, a woman could
never be other than well dressed, and all of these things Mary
learned by heart and asked her mother to tell her more, which
her mother was quite able and willing to do. [173]
Chap. XXVIII
WHEN the sexual instinct is aroused, men and dogs and frogs and
beetles, and such other creatures as are inside or outside of
this catalogue, are very tenacious in the pursuit of their ambition.
We can seldom get away from that which attracts or repels us.
Love and hate are equally magnetic and compelling, and each, being
supernormal, drags us willingly or woefully in its wake, until
at last our blind persistency is either routed or appeased, and
we advance our lauds or gnash our teeth as the occasion bids us.
There is no tragedy more woeful than the victory of hate, nor
any attainment so hopelessly barren as the sterility of that achievement;
for hate is finality, and finality is the greatest evil which
can happen in a world of movement. Love is an inaugurator displaying
[174] his banners on captured peaks and pressing for ever to a
new and more gracious enterprise, but the victories of hate are
gained in a ditch from which there is no horizon visible, and
whence there does not go even one limping courier,
After Mary fled from the embrace of the great policeman
he came to think more closely of her than he had been used; but
her image was throned now in anger: she came to him like a dull
brightness wherefrom desolate thunder might roll at an instant.
Indeed, she began to obsess him so that not even the ministrations
of his aunt nor the obeisances of that pleasant girl, the name
of whose boots was Fairybell, could give him any comfort or wean
him from a contemplation which sprawled gloomily between him and
his duties to the traffic. If he had not discovered the lowliness
of her quality his course might have been simple and straightforward:
the issue, in such an event, would have narrowed to every mans
poser - whether he should marry this girl or that girl? - but
the arithmetic whereby such matters are elucidated would at the
last have eased his perplexity, and the path indicated [175] could
have been followed with the fullest freedom on his part and without
any disaster to his self-love. If, whichever way his inclination
wavered, there was any pang of regret (and there was bound to
be), such a feeling would be ultimately waived by his reason or
retained as a memorial which had a gratifying savour. But the
knowledge of Marys social inferiority complicated matters,
for, although this automatically put her out of the question as
his wife, her subsequent ill-treatment of himself had injected
a virus to his blood which was one-half a passion for her body
and one-half a frenzy for vengeance. He could have let her go
easily enough if she had not first let him go; for he read dismissal
in her action and resented it as a trespass on his own just prerogative.
- He had but to stretch out his hand and she would have dropped
to it as tamely as a kitten, whereas now she eluded his hand,
would, indeed, have nothing to do with it; and this could not
be forgiven. He would gladly have beaten her into submission,
for what right has a slip of a girl to withstand the advances
of a man and a policeman? That is a crooked spirit demanding to
be straightened with a truncheon: but as we [176] cannot decently,
or even peaceably, beat a girl until she is married to us, he
had to relinquish that dear idea. He would have dismissed her
from his mind with the contempt she deserved, but, alas! he could
not: she clung there like a burr, not to be dislodged saving by
possession or a beating - two shuddering alternatives - for she
had become detestably dear to him. His senses and his self-esteem
conspired to heave her to a pedestal where his eye strained upwards
in bewilderment - that she who was below him could be above him!
This was astounding: she must be pulled from her eminence and
stamped back to her native depths by his own indignant hoofs;
thence she might be gloriously lifted again with a calm, benignant,
masculine hand shedding pardons and favours, and perhaps a mollifying
unguent for her bruises. Bruises! a knee, an elbow - they were
nothing; little damages which to kiss was to make well again.
Will not women cherish a bruise that it may be medicined by male
kisses? Nature and precedent have both sworn to it ... But she was
out of reach; his hand, high-flung as it might be, could not get
to her. He went furiously to the [177] Phoenix Park, to St. Stephens
Green, to outlying leafy spots and sheltered lanes, but she was
in none of these places. He even prowled about the neighbourhood
of her home and could not meet her. Once he had seen Mary as she
came along the road, and he drew back into a doorway. A young
man was marching by her side, a young man who gabbled without
ceasing and to whom Mary chattered again with an equal volubility.
As they passed by Mary caught sight of him, and her face went
flaming. She caught her companions arm, and they hurried
down the road at a great pace ... She had never chattered to him.
Always he had done the talking, and she had been an obedient,
grateful listener. Nor did he quarrel with her silence, but her
reserve shocked him; it was a pretence - worse, a lie - a masked
and hooded falsehood. She had surrendered to him willingly, and
yet drew about her a protective armour of reserve wherein she
skulked immune to the arms which were lawfully victorious. Is
there, then, no loot for a conqueror? We demand the keys of the
City Walls and unrestricted entry, or our torches shall blaze
again. This chattering Mary [178] was a girl whom he had never
caught sight of at all. She had been hiding from him even in his
presence. In every aspect she was an anger. But she could talk
to the fellow with her ... a skinny whipper-snapper, whom the breath
of a man could shred into remote, eyeless vacuity. Was this man
another insult? Did she not even wait to bury her dead? Pah! she
was not value for his thought. A girl so lightly facile might
be blown from here to there and she would scarcely notice the
difference. Here and there were the same places to her, and him
and him were the same person. A girl of that type comes to a bad
end: he had seen it often, the type and the end, and never separate.
Can one not prophesy from facts? He saw a slut in a slum, a drab
hovering by a dark entry, and the vision cheered him mightily
for one glowing minute and left him unoccupied for the next, into
which she thronged with the flutter of wings and the sound of
a great mocking.
His aunt tracked his brows back to the responsible duties
of his employment, and commiserated with him, and made a lamentation
about matters with which he never had [179] been occupied, so
that the last tag of his good manners departed from him, and he
damned her unswervingly into consternation. That other pleasant
girl, whose sweetness he had not so much tasted as sampled, had
taken to brooding in his presence: she sometimes drooped an eye
upon him like a question ... Let her look out or maybe hed
blaze into her teeth: howl menace down her throat until she swooned.
Some one should yield to him a visible and tangible agony to balance
his. Does law probe no deeper than the pillage of a watch? Can
one filch our self-respect and escape free? Shall not our souls
also sue for damages against its aggressor? Some person rich enough
must pay for his lacerations or there was less justice in heaven
than in the Police Courts; and it might be that girls lot
to expiate the sins of Mary. It would be a pleasure, if a sour
one, to make somebody wriggle as he had, and somebody should wriggle;
of that he was blackly determined. [180]
Chap. XXIX
INDEED, Mrs. Caffertys lodger and Mary had become quite
intimate, and it was not through the machinations of either that
this had happened. Ever since Mrs. Makebelieve had heard of that
young mans appetite, and the miseries through which he had
to follow it, she had been deeply concerned on his behalf. She
declined to believe that the boy ever got sufficient to eat, and
she enlarged to her daughter on the seriousness of this privation
to a young man. Disabilities, such as a young girl could not comprehend,
followed in the train of insufficient nourishment. Mrs. Cafferty
was her friend, and was, moreover, a good decent woman against
whom the tongue of rumour might wag in vain; but Mrs. Cafferty
was the mother of six children, and her natural kindliness dared
not expand to [181] their detriment. Furthermore, the fact of
her husband being out of work tended to still further circumscribe
the limits of her generosity. She divined a lean pot in the Cafferty
household, and she saw the young man getting only as much food
as Mrs. Cafferty dared to give him, so that the pangs of his hunger
almost gnawed at her own vitals. Under these circumstances she
had sought for an opportunity to become better acquainted with
him, and had very easily succeeded; so when Mary found him seated
on their bed and eating violently of their half-loaf, if she was
astonished at first she was also very glad. Her mother watched
the demolition of their food with a calm happiness, for although
the amount she could contribute was small, every little helped,
and not alone were his wants assisted, but her friend Mrs. Cafferty
and her children were also aided by this dulling of an appetite
which might have endangered their household peace.
The young man repaid their hospitality by an easy generosity
of speech covering affairs which neither Mrs. Makebelieve nor
her daughter had many opportunities for studying. He spoke of
those very interesting [182] matters with which a young man is
concerned, and his speculations on various subjects, while often
quite ignorant, were sufficiently vivid to be interesting and
were wrong in a boyish fashion which was not unpleasant. He was
very argumentative, but was still open to reason; therefore Mrs.
Makebelieve had opportunities for discussion which were seldom
granted to her. Insensibly she adopted the position of guide,
philosopher, and friend to him; and Mary also found new interests
in speech, for although the young man thought very differently
from her, he did think upon her own plane, and the things which
secretly engrossed him were also the things wherewith she was
deeply preoccupied. A community of ignorances may be as binding
as a community of interests. We have a dull suspicion of that
him or her who knows more than we do, but the person who is prepared
to go out adventuring with us, with surmise only for a chart and
enjoyment for a guide, may use our hand as his own and our pockets
as his treasury.
As the young man had no more shyness than a cat, it soon
fell out that he and Mary took their evening walks together. He
was [183] a clerk in a large retail establishment, and had many
things to tell Mary which were of great interest to both of them.
For in his place of business he had both friends and enemies of
whom he was able to speak with the fluency which was their due.
Mary knew, for instance, that the chief was bald but decent (she
could not believe that the connection was natural), and that the
second in command had neither virtues nor whiskers. (She saw him
as a codfish with a malignant eye.) He epitomised the vices which
belonged in detail to the world, but were peculiar to himself
in bulk. (He must be hairy in that event.) Language, even the
young mans, could not describe him adequately. (He ate boys
for breakfast and girls for tea.) With this person the young man
was in eternal conflict (a bear with little ears and big teeth);
not open conflict, for that would have meant instant dismissal
(not hairy at all - a long, slimy eel with a lot of sense), but
a veiled, unremitting warfare which occupied all their spare attention.
The young man knew for an actual fact that some day he would be
compelled to hit that chap, and it would be a sorry day for the
fellow, [184] because his ability to hit was startling. He told
Mary of the evil results which had followed some of his blows,
and Marys incredulity was only heightened by a display of
the young mans muscles. She extolled these because she thought
it was her duty to do so, but preserved some doubts of their unique
destructiveness. Once she asked him could he fight a policeman,
and he assured her that policemen are not able to fight at all
singly, but only in squads, when their warfare is callous and
ugly and conducted mainly with their boots; so that decent people
have no respect for their fighting qualities or their private
characters. He assured her that not only could he fight a policeman,
but he could also tyrannise over the seed, breed, and generation
of such a one, and, moreover, he could accomplish this without
real exertion. Against all policemen and soldiers the young man
professed an eager hostility, and with these bad people he included
landlords and many employers of labour. His denunciation of these
folk might be traced back to the belief that none of them treated
one fairly. A policeman, he averred, would arrest a man for next
door to nothing, and any resistance [185] offered to their spleen
rendered the unfortunate prisoner liable to be man-handled in
his cell until their outraged dignity was appeased. The three
capital crimes upon which a man is liable to arrest are for being
drunk, or disorderly, or for refusing to fight, and to these perils
a young man is peculiarly susceptible, and is, to that extent,
interested in the Force, and critical of their behaviour. The
sight of a soldier annoyed him, for he saw a conqueror, trampling
vaingloriously through the capital of his country, and the inability
of his land to eject the braggart astonished and mortified him.
Landlords had no bowels of compassion. There was no kindliness
of heart among them, nor any wish to assist those whose whole
existence was engaged on their behalf. He saw them as lazy, unproductive
gluttons who cried for, ever Give, give, and who gave
nothing in return but an increased insolent tyranny. Many employers
came into the same black category. They were people who had disowned
all duty to humanity, and who saw in themselves the beginning
and the end of all things. They gratified their acquisitiveness
not in order that they might become benefactors of their [186]
kind (the only righteous freedom of which we know), but merely
to indulge a petty exercise of power and to attain that approval
which is granted to wealth and the giving of which is the great
foolishness of mankind. These people used their helpers and threw
them away; they exploited and bought and sold their fellow-men,
while their arrogant self-assurance and the monstrous power which
they had gathered for their security shocked him like a thing
unbelievable in spite of its reality. That such things could be,
fretted him into clamour. He wanted to point them out to all people.
He saw his neighbours ears clogged, and he was prepared
to die howling if only he could pierce those encrusted auditories.
That what was so simple to him should not be understood by everybody!
He could see plainly and others could not, although their eyes
looked straightly forward and veritably rolled with intent and
consciousness! Did their eyes and ears and brains act differently
to his, or was he a singular monster cursed from his birth with
madness? At times he was prepared to let humanity and Ireland
go to the devil their own way, he being well assured that without
[187] him they were bound quickly for deep perdition. Of Ireland
he sometimes spoke with a fervour of passion which would be outrageous
if addressed to a woman. Surely he saw her as a woman, queenly
and distressed and very proud. He was physically anguished for
her, and the man who loved her was the very brother of his bones.
There were some words the effect of which were almost hypnotic
on him - The Isle of the Blest, The Little Dark Rose, The Poor
Old Woman, and Caitlin the Daughter of Holohan. The mere repetition
of these phrases lifted him to an ecstasy; they had hidden, magical
meanings which pricked deeply to his heart-strings and thrilled
him to a tempest of pity and love. He yearned to do deeds of valour,
violent, grandiose feats which would redound to her credit and
make the name of Irishmen synonymous with either greatness or
singularity: for, as yet, the distinction between these words
was no more clear to him than it is to any other young man who
reads violence as heroism and eccentricity as genius. Of England
he spoke with something like stupefaction: as a child cowering
in a dark wood tells of the ogre who [188] has slain his father
and carried his mother away to a drear captivity in his castle
built of bones - so he spoke of England. He saw an Englishman
stalking hideously forward with a princess tucked under each arm,
while their brothers and their knights were netted in enchantment
and slept heedless of the wrongs done to their ladies and of the
defacement of their shields ... Alas, alas and alas, for
the once proud people of Banba! [189]
Chap. XXX
MRS. MAKEBELIEVE was astonished when the policeman knocked at
her door. A knock at her door was a rare sound, for many years
had gone by since any one had come to visit her. Of late Mrs.
Cafferty often came to talk to her, but she never knocked; she
usually shouted, Can I come in? and then she came
in. But this was a ceremonious knock which startled her, and the
spectacle of the great man bending through the doorway almost
stopped her breath. Mary also was so shocked into terror that
she stood still, forgetful of all good manners, and stared at
the visitor open-eyed. She knew and did not know what he had come
for; but that, in some way, his appearance related to her she
was instantly assured, although she could not even dimly guess
at a closer explanation of his visit. [190] His eyes stayed on
her for an instant and then passed to her mother, and, following
her rather tremulous invitation, he came into the room. There
was no chair to sit on, so Mrs. Makebelieve requested him to sit
down on the bed, which he did. She fancied he had come on some
errand from Mrs. OConnor, and was inclined to be angry at
a visit which she construed as an intrusion, so, when he was seated,
she waited to hear what he might have to say.
Even to her it was evident that the big man was perplexed
and abashed; his hat was in his way, and so were his hands, and
when he spoke his voice was so husky as to be distressful. On
Mary, who had withdrawn to the very end of the room, this discomfort
of speech had a peculiar effect: the unsteady voice touched her
breast to a kindred fluttering, and her throat grew parched and
so irritated that a violent fit of coughing could not be restrained,
and this, with the nervousness and alarm which his appearance
had thronged upon her, drove her to a very fever of distress.
But she could not take her eyes away from him, and she wondered
and was afraid of what he might say. [191] She knew there were
a great many things he might discuss which she would be loath
to hear in her mothers presence, and which her mother would
not be gratified to hear either.
He spoke for a few moments about the weather, and Mrs. Makebelieve
hearkened to his remarks with a perplexity which she made no effort
to conceal. She was quite certain he had not called to speak about
the weather, and she was prepared to tell him so if a suitable
opportunity should occur. She was also satisfied that he had not
come on a formal, friendly visit - the memory of her last interview
with him forbade such a conjecture, for on that occasion politeness
had been deposed from her throne and acrimony had reigned in her
stead. If his aunt had desired him to undertake an embassy to
her he would surely have delivered his message without preamble,
and would not have been thrown by so trifling a duty into the
state of agitation in which he was. It was obvious, therefore,
that he had not come with a message relating to her work. Something
of fear touched Mrs. Makebelieve as she looked at him, and her
voice had an uneasy note when [192] she requested to know what
she could do for him.
The policeman suddenly, with the gesture of one throwing
away anchors, plunged into the heart of his matter, and as he
spoke the look on Mrs. Makebelieves face changed quickly
from bewilderment to curiosity and dulled again to a blank amazement.
After the first few sentences she half turned to Mary, but an
obscure shame prevented her from searching out her daughters
eyes. It was borne quickly and painfully to her that Mary had
not treated her fairly: there was a secret here with which a mother
ought to have been trusted, and one which she could not believe
Mary would have withheld from her; and so, gauging her childs
feelings by her own, she steadfastly refused to look at her lest
the shocked surprise in her eyes might lacerate the girl she loved,
and who she knew must at the instant be in a sufficient agony.
- Undoubtedly the man was suggesting that he wanted to marry her
daughter, and the unexpectedness of such a proposal left her mentally
gaping; but that there must have been some preliminaries of meeting
and courtship became obvious to her. Mary also [193] listened
to his remarks in a stupor. Was there no possibility at all of
getting away from the man? A tenacity such as this seemed to her
malignant. She had the feeling of one being pursued by some relentless
and unscrupulous hunter. She heard him speaking through a cloud,
and the only things really clear to her were the thoughts which
she knew her mother must be thinking. She was frightened and ashamed,
and the sullenness which is the refuge of most young people descended
upon her like a darkness. Her face grew heavy and vacant, and
she stared in front of her in the attitude of one who had nothing
to do with what was passing. She did not believe altogether that
he was in earnest: her immediate discomfort showed him as one
who was merely seeking to get her into trouble with her mother
in order to gratify an impotent rage. Twice or three times she
flamed suddenly, went tiptoe to run from the room. A flash, and
she would be gone from the place, down the stairs, into the streets,
and away anywhere, and she tingled with the very speed of her
vision; but she knew that one word from her mother would halt
her like a barrier, and she hated the [194] thought that he should
be a witness to her obedience.
While he was speaking he did not look at Mary. He told Mrs.
Makebelieve that, he loved her daughter very much, and he begged
her permission and favour for his suit. He gave her to understand
that he and Mary had many opportunities of becoming acquainted,
and were at one in this desire for matrimony. - To Mrs. Makebelieves
mind there recurred a conversation which she had once held with
her daughter, when Mary was curious to know if a policeman was
a desirable person for a girl to marry. She saw this question
now, not as being prompted by a laudable, an almost scientific
curiosity, but as the interested, sly speculation of a schemer
hideously accomplished in deceit. Mary could see that memory flitting
back through her mothers brain, and it tormented her. Nor
was her mother at ease - there was no chair to sit upon; she had
to stand and listen to all this while he spoke, more or less at
his ease, from the bed. If she also had been sitting down she
might have been mistress of her thoughts and able to deal naturally
with the situation; but an easy pose is difficult when [195] standing:
her hands would fold in front of her, and the school-girl attitude
annoyed and restrained her. Also, the man appeared to be in earnest
in what he said. His words at the least, and the intention which
drove them, seemed honourable. She could not give rein to her
feelings without lapsing to a barbarity which she might not justify
to herself even in anger, and might, indeed, blush to remember.
Perhaps his chief disqualification consisted in a relationship
to Mrs. OConnor for which he could not justly be held to
blame, and for which she sincerely pitied him. But this certainly
was a disqualification never to be redeemed. He might leave his
work, or his religion, or his country, but he could never quit
his aunt, because he carried her with him under his skin; he was
her with additions, and at times Mrs. Makebelieve could see Mrs.
OConnor looking cautiously at her through the policemans
eyes; a turn of his forehead and she was there like a thin wraith
that vanished and appeared again. The man was spoiled for her.
He did not altogether lack sense, and the fact that he wished
to marry her daughter showed that he was not so utterly beyond
the reach of redemption as she had fancied. [196]
Meanwhile, he had finished his statement as regarded the
affection which he bore to her daughter and the suitability of
their temperaments, and had hurled himself into an explanation
of his worldly affairs, comprising his salary as a policeman,
the possibility of promotion and the increased emoluments which
would follow it, and the certain pension which would sustain his
age. There were, furthermore, his parents, from whose decease
he would reap certain monetary increments, and the deaths of other
relatives from which an additional enlargement of his revenues
might reasonably be expected. Indeed, he had not desired to speak
of these matters at all, but the stony demeanour of Mrs. Makebelieve
and the sullen aloofness of her daughter forced him, however reluctantly,
to draw even ignoble weapons from his armoury. He had not conceived
they would be so obdurate: he had, in fact, imagined that the
elder woman must be flattered by his offer to marry her daughter,
and when no evidence to support this was forthcoming he was driven
to appeal to the cupidity which he believed occupies the heart
of every middle-aged, hard-worked woman. But these statements
also were [197] received with a dreadful composure. He could have
smashed Mrs. Makebelieve where she stood. Now and again his body
strained to a wild, physical outburst, a passionate, red fury
that would have terrified these women to their knees, while he
roared their screams into thin whimpers as a man should. He did
not even dare to stop speaking, and his efforts at an easy, good-humoured,
half-careless presentation of his case was bitterly painful to
him as it was to his auditors. The fact that they were both standing
up unnerved him also - the pleasant equality which should have
formed the atmosphere of such an interview was destroyed from
the first moment, and having once sat down, he did not like to
stand up again. He felt glued to the bed on which he sat, and
he felt also that if he stood up the tension in the room would
so relax that Mrs. Makebelieve would at once break out into speech
sarcastic and final, or her daughter might scream reproaches and
disclaimers of an equal finality. At her he did not dare to look,
but the corner of his eye could see her shape stiffened against
the fireplace, an attitude so different from the pliable contours
to [198] which he was accustomed in her as almost to be repellent.
He would have thanked God to find himself outside the room, but
how to get out of it he did not know: his self-esteem forbade
anything like a retreat without honour, his nervousness did not
permit him to move at all, the anger which prickled the surface
of his body and mind was held in check only by an instinct of
fear as to what he might do if he moved, and so, with dreadful
jocularity, he commenced to speak of himself, his personal character,
his sobriety and steadiness - of all those safe negations on which
many women place reliance he spoke, and also of certain small
vices which he magnified merely for the sake of talking, such
as smoking, an odd glass of porter, and the shilling which, now
and again, he had ventured upon a race-horse.
Mary listened to him for a while with angry intentness.
The fact that she was the subject of his extraordinary discourse
quickened at the first all her apprehensions. Had the matter been
less important she would have been glad to look at herself in
this strange position, and to savour, with as much detachment
as was possible, the whole spirit of the [199] adventure. But
when she heard him, as she put it, telling on her,
laying bare to her mother all the walks they had taken together,
visits to restaurants and rambles through the streets and the
parks, what he had said to her on this occasion and on that, and
her remarks on such and such a matter, she could not visualise
him save as a malignant and uncultivated person; and when he tacitly
suggested that she was as eager for matrimony as he was, and so
put upon her the horrible onus of rejecting him before a second
person, she closed her mind and her ears against him. She refused
to listen, although her perceptions admitted the trend of his
speech. His words droned heavily and monotonously to her as through
dull banks of fog. She made up her mind that if she were asked
any questions by either of them she would not reply, and that
she would not look at either of them; and then she thought that
she would snap and stamp her feet and say that she hated him,
that he had looked down on her because she worked for his aunt,
that he had meanly been ashamed of and cut her because she was
poor, that he had been going with another girl all the time he
was going with her, and that he [200] only pursued her in order
to annoy her; that she didnt love him, that she didnt
even like him - that, in fact, she disliked him heartily. She
wished to say all these things in one whirling outcry, but feared
that before she had rightly begun she might become abashed, or,
worse, might burst into tears and lose all the dignity which she
meant to preserve in his presence for the purpose of showing to
him in the best light exactly what he was losing.
But the big man had come to the end of his speech. He made
a few attempts to begin anew on the desirability of such a union
for both of them, and the happiness it would give him if Mrs.
Makebelieve would come to live with them when they were married.
He refused to let it appear that there was any doubt as to Marys
attitude in the matter, for up to the moment he came to their
door he had not doubted her willingness himself. Her late avoidance
of him he had put down to mere feminine tactics, which leads on
by holding off. The unwilling person he had been assured was himself
- he stooped to her, and it was only after a severe battle that
he had been able to do it. The astonishment and disapproval of
his relatives and friends at [201] such a step were very evident
to him, for to a man of his position and figure girls were cheap
creatures, the best of them to be had for the mere asking. Therefore,
the fact that this girl could be seriously rejecting his offer
of marriage came upon him like red astonishment. He had no more
to say, however, and he blundered and fumbled into silence.
For a moment or two the little room was so still that the
quietness seemed to hum and buzz like an eternity. Then, with
a sigh, Mrs. Makebelieve spoke.
I dont know at all, said she, why
you should speak to me about this, for neither my daughter nor
yourself have ever even hinted to me before that you were courting
one another. Why Mary should keep such a secret from her own mother
I dont know. Maybe Ive been cruel and frightened her,
although I dont remember doing anything that she could have
against me of that sort: or, maybe, she didnt think I was
wise enough to advise her about a particular thing like her marriage,
for, God knows, old women are foolish enough in their notions,
or else they wouldnt be slaving and grinding for the sake
of their children the way they do be doing [202] year in and year
out, every day in the week, and every hour of the day. It isnt
any wonder at all that a child would be a liar and a sleeveen
and a trampler of the roads with the first man that nods to her
when her mother is a foolish person that she cant trust.
Of course, I wouldnt be looking for a gentleman like yourself
to mention the matter to me when I might be scrubbing out your
aunts kitchen or her hall-door, maybe, and you sitting in
the parlour with the company. Sure, Im only an old charwoman,
and what does it matter at all what Id be thinking, or whether
Id be agreeing or not to anything? Dont I get my wages
for my work, and what more does anybody want in the world? As
for me going to live with you when you are married - it was kind
of you to ask me that; but its not the sort of thing Im
likely to do, for if I didnt care for you as a stranger
Im not going to like you any better as my daughters
husband. Youll excuse me saying one thing, sir, but while
we are talking we may as well be talking out, and its this
- that I never did like you, and I never will like you, and Id
sooner see my daughter married to any one at all than to yourself.
But, sure, [203] I neednt be talking about it; isnt
it Marys business altogether? and shell be settling
it with you nicely, I dont doubt. Shes a practised
hand now at arranging things, like you are yourself, and it will
do me good to be learning something from her.
Mrs. Makebelieve took a cloth in her hand and walked over
to the fireplace, which she commenced to polish.
The big man looked at Mary. It was incumbent on him to say
something. Twice he attempted to speak, and each time, on finding
himself about to say something regarding the weather, he stopped.
Mary did not look at him; her eyes were fixed stubbornly on a
part of the wall well away from his neighbourhood, and it seemed
to him that she had made a vow to herself never to look at him
again. But the utter silence of the room was unbearable. He knew
that he ought to get up and go out, but he could not bring himself
to do so. His self-love, his very physical strength, rebelled
against so tame a surrender. One thought he gathered in from swaying
vacuity - that the timid little creature whom he had patronised
would not find the harsh courage to refuse him point-blank if
he [204] charged her straitly with the question: and so he again
assayed speech.
Your mother is angry with us, Mary, said he,
and I suppose she has good right to be angry; but the reason
I did not speak to her before, as I admit I should have if Id
done the right thing, was that I had very few chances of meeting
her, and never did meet her without some other person being there
at the same time. I suppose the reason you did not say anything
was that you wanted to be quite sure of yourself and of me too
before you mentioned it. We have both done the wrong thing in
not being open, but maybe your mother will forgive us when she
knows we had no intention of hurting her, or of doing anything
behind her back. Your mother seems to hate me: I dont know
why, because she hardly knows me at all, and Ive never done
her any harm or said a word against her. Perhaps when she knows
me as well as you do shell change her mind: but you know
I love you better than any one else, and that Id do anything
I could to please you and be a good husband to you. What I want
to ask you before your mother is - will you marry me? [205]
Mary made no reply. She did not look or give the slightest
sign that she had heard. But now it was that she did not dare
to look at him. The spectacle of this big man badgered by her
and by her mother, pleading to her, and pleading, as he and she
well knew, hopelessly, would have broken her heart if she looked
at him. She had to admire the good masculine fight he made of
it. Even his tricks of word and tactic, which she instantly divined,
moved her almost to tears; but she feared terribly that if she
met his gaze she might not be able to resist his huge helplessness,
and that she might be compelled to do whatever he begged of her
even in despite of her own wishes.
The interval which followed his question weighed heavily
upon them all. It was only broken by Mrs. Makebelieve, who began
to hum a song as she polished the fire-grate. She meant to show
her careless detachment from the whole matter, but in the face
of Marys silence she could not keep it up. After a few moments
she moved around and said:
Why dont you answer the gentleman, Mary?
Mary turned and looked at her, and the [206] tears which
she had resisted so long swam in her eyes: although she could
keep her features composed she had no further command over her
tears.
Ill answer whatever you ask me, mother,
she whispered.
Then, tell the gentleman whether you will marry him
or not.
I dont want to marry any one at all, said
Mary.
You are not asked to marry any one, darling,
said Mrs. Makebelieve, but some one - this gentleman here
whose name I dont happen to know. Do you know his name?
No, said Mary.
My name ... began the policeman.
It doesnt matter, sir, said Mrs. Make-believe.
Do you want to marry this gentleman, Mary?
No, whispered Mary.
Are you in love with him?
Mary turned completely away from him. No, she
whispered again.
Do you think you ever will be in love with him?
She felt as a rat might when hunted to a corner. But the
end must be very near; [207] this could not last for ever, because
nothing can. Her lips were parched, her eyes were burning. She
wanted to lie down and go asleep, and waken again laughing to
say, It was a dream.
Her reply was almost inaudible. No, she said.
You are quite sure? It is always better to be quite
sure.
She did not answer any more, but the faint droop of her
head gave the reply her mother needed.
You see, sir, said Mrs. Makebelieve, that
you were mistaken in your opinion. My daughter is not old enough
yet to be thinking of marriage and such-like. Children do be thoughtless.
I am sorry for all the trouble she has given you, and -
a sudden compunction stirred her, for the man was standing up
now, and there was no trace of Mrs. OConnor visible in him;
his face was as massive and harsh as a piece of wall. Dont
you be thinking too badly of us now, said Mrs. Makebelieve,
with some agitation; the child is too young altogether to
be asking her to marry. Maybe in a year or two - I said things,
I know, but I was vexed, and ... [208]
The big man nodded his head and marched out.
Mary ran to her mother, moaning like a sick person, but
Mrs. Makebelieve did not look at her. She lay down on the bed
and turned her face to the wall, and she did not speak to Mary
for a long time. [209]
Chap. XXXI
When the young man who lodged with Mrs. Cafferty came in on the
following day he presented a deplorable appearance. His clothes
were torn and his face had several large strips of sticking-plaster
on it, but he seemed to be in a mood of extraordinary happiness
notwithstanding, and proclaimed that he had participated in the
one really great fight of his lifetime, that he wasnt injured
at all, and that he wouldnt have missed it for a pension.
Mrs. Cafferty was wild with indignation, and marched him
into Mrs. Makebelieves room, where he had again to tell
his story and have his injuries inspected and commiserated. Even
Mr. Cafferty came into the room on this occasion. He was a large,
slow man, dressed very comfortably in a red beard - his beard
was so red and so persistent that it [210] quite overshadowed
the rest of his wrappings and did, indeed, seem to clothe him.
As he stood the six children walked in and out of his legs, and
stood on his feet in their proper turns without causing him any
apparent discomfort. During the young mans recital Mr. Cafferty
every now and then solemnly and powerfully smote his left hand
with his right fist, and requested that the aggressor should be
produced to him.
The young man said that as he was coming home the biggest
man in the world walked up to him. He had never set eyes on the
man before in his life, and thought at first he wanted to borrow
a match or ask the way to somewhere, or something like that, and,
accordingly, he halted; but the big man gripped him by the shoulder
and said, You damned young whelp! and then he laughed
and hit him a tremendous blow with his other hand. He twisted
himself free at that, and said, Whats that for?
and then the big man made another desperate clout at him. A fellow
wasnt going to stand that kind of thing, so he let out at
him with his left, and then jumped in with two short arm jabs
that must have tickled the chap; that fellow didnt [211]
have it all his own way anyhow ... The young man exhibited his
knuckles, which were skinned and bleeding, as evidence of some
exchange; but, he averred, you might as well be punching a sack
of coal as that mans face. In another minute they both slipped
and rolled over and over in the road, hitting and kicking as they
sprawled: then a crowd of people ran forward and pulled them asunder.
When they were separated he saw the big man lift his fist, and
the person who was holding him ducked suddenly and ran for his
life: the other folk got out of the way too, and the big man walked
over to where he stood and stared into his face. His jaw was stuck
out like the seat of a chair, and his moustache was like a bristle
of barbed wire. The young man said to him, What the hells
wrong with you to go bashing a man for nothing at all? and
all of a sudden the big fellow turned and walked away. It was
a grand fight altogether, said the youth, but the other man was
a mile and a half too big for him.
As this story proceeded Mrs. Makebelieve looked once or
twice at her daughter. Marys face had gone very pale, and
she nodded back a confirmation of her mothers conjecture;
[212] but it did not seem necessary or wise to either of them
that they should explain their thoughts. The young man did not
require either condolences or revenge. He was well pleased at
an opportunity to measure his hardihood against a worthy opponent.
He had found that his courage exceeded his strength, as it always
should - for how could we face the gods and demons of existence
if our puny arms were not backed up by our invincible eyes? -
and he displayed his contentment at the issue as one does a banner
emblazoned with merits. Mrs. Makebelieve understood also that
the big mans action was merely his energetic surrender,
as of one who, instead of tendering his sword courteously to the
victor, hurls it at him with a malediction; and that in assaulting
their friend he was bidding them farewell as heartily and impressively
as he was able. So they fed the young man and extolled him, applauding
to the shrill winding of his trumpet until he glowed again in
the full satisfaction of heroism.
He and Mary did not discontinue their evening walks. Of
these Mrs. Makebelieve was fully cognisant, and although she did
not remark on the fact, she had been observing [213] the growth
of their intimacy with a care which was one part approval and
one part pain; for it was very evident to her that her daughter
was no longer a child to be controlled and directed by authority.
Her little girl was a big girl; she had grown up and was eager
to undertake the business of life on her own behalf. But the period
of Mrs. Makebelieves motherhood had drawn to a close, and
her arms were empty. She was too used now to being a mother to
relinquish easily the prerogatives of that status, and her discontent
had this justification and assistance that it could be put into
definite words, fronted and approved or rejected as reason urged.
By knowledge and thought we will look through a stone wall if
we look long enough, for we see less through eyes than through
Time. Time is the clarifying perspective whereby myopia of any
kind is adjusted, and a thought emerges in its field as visibly
as a tree does in natures. Mrs. Makebelieve saw seventeen
years apprenticeship to maternity cancelled automatically
without an explanation or a courtesy, and for a little time her
world was in ruins, the ashes of existence powdered her hair and
her forehead. Then she discovered that the [214] debris was valuable
in known currency; the dust was golden: her love remained to her
undisturbed and unlikely to be disturbed by whatever event. And
she discovered further that parentage is neither a game nor a
privilege, but a duty; it is - astounding thought - the care of
the young until the young can take care of itself. It was for
this freedom only that her elaborate care had been necessary;
her bud had blossomed and she could add no more to its bloom or
fragrance. Nothing had happened that was not natural, and whoso
opposes his brow against that imperious urgency is thereby renouncing
his kind and claiming a kinship with the wild boar and the goat,
which they, too, may repudiate with leaden foreheads. There remained
also the common human equality, not alone of blood, but of sex
also, which might be fostered and grow to an intimacy more dear
and enduring, more lovely and loving, than the necessarily one-sided
devotions of parentage. Her duties in that relationship having
been performed, it was her daughters turn to take up hers
and prove her rearing by repaying to her mother the conscious
love which intelligence and a good heart dictates. This given
[215] Mrs. Makebelieve could smile happily again, for her arms
would be empty only for a little time. The continuity of nature
does not fail, saving for extraordinary instances. She sees to
it that a breast and an arm shall not very long be unoccupied,
and consequently, as Mrs. Makebelieve sat contemplating that futurity
which is nothing more than a prolongation of experience, she could
smile contentedly, for all was very well. [216]
Chap. XXXII
IF THE UNEXPECTED did not often happen life would be a logical, scientific progression which might become dispirited and repudiate its goal for very boredom, but nature has cunningly diversified the methods whereby she coaxes or coerces us to prosecute, not our own, but her own adventure. Beyond every corner there may be a tavern or a church wherein both the saint and the sinner may be entrapped and remoulded. Beyond the skyline you may find a dynamite cartridge, a drunken tinker, a mad dog, or a shilling which some person has dropped; and any one of these unexpectednesses may be potent to urge the traveller down a side street and put a crook in the straight line which had been his life, and to which he had [217] become miserably reconciled. The element of surprise being, accordingly, one of the commonest things in the world, we ought not to be hypercritical in our review of singularities, or say, These things do not happen - because it is indisputable that they do happen. That combination which comprises a dark night, a highwayman armed and hatted to the teeth, and myself, may be a purely fortuitous one, but will such a criticism bring any comfort to the highwayman? And the concourse of three benevolent millionaires with the person to whom poverty can do no more is so pleasant and possible that I marvel it does not occur more frequently. I am prepared to believe on the very lightest assurance that these things do happen, but are hushed up for reasons which would be cogent enough if they were available.
Mrs. Makebelieve opened the letter which the evenings post had brought to her. She had pondered well before opening it, and had discussed with her daughter all the possible people who could have written it. The envelope was long and narrow; it was addressed in a swift emphatic hand, the tail of the letter M enjoying a career distinguished beyond [218] any of its fellows by length and beauty. The envelope, moreover, was sealed by a brilliant red lion with jagged whiskers and a simper, who threatened the person daring to open a missive not addressed to him with the vengeance of a battle-axe which was balanced lightly but truculently on his right claw.
This envelope contained several documents purporting to be copies of extraordinary originals, and amongst them a letter which was read by Mrs. Makebelieve more than ten thousand times or ever she went to bed that night. It related that more than two years previously one Patrick Joseph Brady had departed this life, and that his will (dated from a multitudinous address in New York) devised and bequeathed to his dearly beloved sister Mary Eileen Makebelieve, otherwise Brady, the following shares and securities for shares, to wit ... and the thereinafter mentioned houses and messuages, lands, tenements, hereditaments, and premises, that was to say ... and all household furniture, books, pictures, prints, plate, linen, glass, and objects of vertu, carriages, wines, liquors, and all consumable stores and effects whatsoever then in the house so and so, and all money then in the [219] Bank and thereafter to accrue due upon the thereinbefore mentioned stocks, funds, shares, and securities ... Mrs. Makebelieve wept and besought God not to make a fool of a woman who was not only poor but old. The letter requested her to call on the following day, or at her earliest convenience, to the above address, and desired that she should bring with her such letters or other documents as would establish her relationship to the deceased and assist in extracting the necessary Grant of Probate to the said Will, and it was subscribed by Messrs. Platitude and Glambe, Solicitors, Commissioners for Oaths, and Protectors of the Poor.
To the Chambers of these gentlemen Mrs. Makebelieve and Mary repaired on the following day, and having produced the letters and other documents for inspection, the philanthropists, Platitude and Glambe, professed themselves to be entirely satisfied as to their bona fides, and exhibited an eagerness to be of immediate service to the ladies in whatever capacity might be conceived. Mrs. Make-believe instantly invoked the Pragmatic Sanction; she put the entire matter to the touchstone of absolute verity by demanding [220] an advance of fifty pounds. Her mind reeled as she said the astounding amount, but her voice did not. A cheque was signed and a clerk despatched, who returned with eight five-pound notes and ten sovereigns of massy gold. Mrs. Makebelieve secreted these, and went home marvelling to find that she was yet alive. No trams ran over her. The motorcars pursued her, and were evaded. She put her hope in God, and explained so breathlessly to the furious street. One cyclist who took corners on trust she cursed by the Ineffable Name, but instantly withdrew the malediction for luck, and addressed his dwindling back with an eye of misery and a voice of benediction. For a little time neither she nor her daughter spoke of the change in their fortunes saving in terms of allusion; they feared that, notwithstanding their trust, God might hear and shatter them with His rolling laughter. They went out again that day furtively and feverishly and bought ...
But on the following morning Mrs. Make-believe returned again
to her labour. She intended finishing her weeks work with
Mrs. OConnor (it might not last for a week). [221] She wished
to observe that lady with the exact particularity, the singleness
of eye, the true, candid, critical scrutiny which had hitherto been
impossible to her. It was, she said to Mary, just possible that
Mrs. OConnor might make some remarks about soap. It was possible
that the lady might advance theories as to how this or that particular
kind of labour ought to be conducted ... Mrs. Makebelieves
black eye shone upon her child with a calm peace, a benevolent happiness
rare indeed to human regard.
In the evening of that day Mary and the young man who lodged with their neighbour went out for the walk which had become customary with them. The young man had been fed with an amplitude which he had never known before, so that not even the remotest slim thread, shred, hint, echo, or memory of hunger remained with him: he tried but could not make a dint in himself anywhere, and, consequently, he was as sad as only a well-fed person can be. Now that his hunger was gone he deemed that all else was gone also. His hunger, his sweetheart, his hopes, his good looks (for his injuries had matured to the ripe purple of the perfect [223] bruise), all were gone, gone, gone. He told it to Mary, but she did not listen to him; to the rolling sky he announced it, and it paid no heed. He walked beside Mary at last in silence, listening to her plans and caprices, the things she would do and buy, the people to whom gifts should be made, and the species of gift uniquely suitable to this person and to that person, the people to whom money might be given and the amounts, and the methods whereby such largesse could be distributed. Hats were mentioned, and dresses, and the new house somewhere - a space-embracing somewhere, beyond surmise, beyond geography. They walked onwards for a long time, so long that at last a familiar feeling stole upon the youth. The word food seemed suddenly a topic worthy of the most spirited conversation. His spirits arose. He was no longer solid, space belonged to him also, it was in him and of him, and so there was a song in his heart. He was hungry and the friend of man again. Now everything was possible. The girl? Was she not by his side? The regeneration of Ireland and of Man? That could be done also; a little leisure and everything that can [223] be thought can be done: even his good looks might be returned to him; he felt the sting and tightness of his bruises and was reassured, exultant. He was a man predestined to bruises; they would be his meat and drink and happiness, his refuge and sanctuary for ever. Let us leave him, then, pacing volubly by the side of Mary, and exploring with a delicate finger his half-closed eye, which, until it was closed entirely, would always be half-closed by the decent buffet of misfortune. His ally and stay was hunger, and there is no better ally for any man: that satisfied and the game is up; for hunger is life, ambition, goodwill and understanding, while fulness is all those negatives which culminate in greediness, stupidity, and decay; so his bruises troubled him no further than as they affected the eyes of a lady wherein he prayed to be comely.
Bruises, unless they are desperate indeed, will heal at the last for no other reason than that they must. The inexorable compulsion of all things is towards health or destruction, life or death, and we hasten our joys or our woes to the logical extreme. It is urgent, therefore, that we be joyous if we wish to [224] live. Our heads may be as solid as is possible, but our hearts and our heels shall be light or we are ruined. As to the golden mean - let us have nothing to do with that thing at all; it may only be gilded, it is very likely made of tin of a dull colour and a lamentable sound, unworthy even of being stolen; and unless our treasures may be stolen they are of no use to us. It is contrary to the laws of life to possess that which other people do not want; therefore, your beer shall foam, your wife shall be pretty, and your little truth shall have a plum in it - for this is so, that your beer can only taste of your company, you can only know your wife when some one else does, and your little truth shall be savoured or perish. Do you demand a big truth? Then, 0 Ambitious! you must turn aside from all your companions and sit very quietly, and if you sit long enough and quiet enough it may come to you; but this thing alone of all things you cannot steal, nor can it be given to you by the County Council. It cannot be communicated, and yet you may get it. It is unspeakable but not unthinkable, and it is born as certainly and unaccountably as you were yourself, and is of just as little [225] immediate consequence. Long, long ago, in the dim beginnings of the world, there was a careless and gay young man who said, Let truth go to hell - and it went there. It was his misfortune that he had to follow it; it is ours that we are his descendants. An evil will either kill you or be killed by you, and (the reflection is comforting) the odds are with us in every fight waged against humanity by the dark or elemental beings. But humanity is timid and lazy, a believer in golden means and subterfuges and compromises, loath to address itself to any combat until its frontiers are virtually overrun and its cities and granaries and places of refuge are in jeopardy from those gloomy marauders. In that wide struggle which we call Progress, evil is always the aggressor and the vanquished, and it is right that this should be so, for without its onslaughts and depredations humanity might fall to a fat slumber upon its corn-sacks and die snoring: or, alternatively, lacking these valorous alarms and excursions, it might become self-satisfied and formularised, and be crushed to death by the mere dull density of virtue. Next to good the most valuable factor in life is evil. By the [226] interaction of these all things are possible, and therefore (or for any other reason that pleases you) let us wave a friendly hand in the direction of that bold, bad policeman whose thoughts were not governed by the Book of Regulations which is issued to all recruits, and who, in despite of the fact that he was enrolled among the very legions of order, had that chaos in his soul which may give birth to a Dancing Star.
As to Mary: Even ordinary, workaday politeness frowns on too abrupt a departure from a lady, particularly one whom we have companioned thus distantly from the careless simplicity of girlhood to the equally careless but complex businesses of adolescence. The world is all before her, and her chronicler may not be her guide. She will have adventures, for everybody has. She will win through with them, for everybody does. She may even meet bolder and badder men than the policeman - shall we, then, detain her? I, for one, having urgent calls elsewhere, will salute her fingers and raise my hat and stand aside, and you will do likewise, because it is my pleasure that you should. She will [227] go forward, then, to do that which is pleasing to the gods, for less than that she cannot do, and more is not to be expected of any one.