<h2><SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN>CHAPTER II</h2>
<p>Uncomfortable as the night, with its rocking movement, and salt smells, may
have been, and in one case undoubtedly was, for Mr. Pepper had insufficient
clothes upon his bed, the breakfast next morning wore a kind of beauty. The
voyage had begun, and had begun happily with a soft blue sky, and a calm sea.
The sense of untapped resources, things to say as yet unsaid, made the hour
significant, so that in future years the entire journey perhaps would be
represented by this one scene, with the sound of sirens hooting in the river
the night before, somehow mixing in.</p>
<p>The table was cheerful with apples and bread and eggs. Helen handed Willoughby
the butter, and as she did so cast her eye on him and reflected, “And she
married you, and she was happy, I suppose.”</p>
<p>She went off on a familiar train of thought, leading on to all kinds of
well-known reflections, from the old wonder, why Theresa had married
Willoughby?</p>
<p>“Of course, one sees all that,” she thought, meaning that one sees
that he is big and burly, and has a great booming voice, and a fist and a will
of his own; “but—” here she slipped into a fine analysis of
him which is best represented by one word, “sentimental,” by which
she meant that he was never simple and honest about his feelings. For example,
he seldom spoke of the dead, but kept anniversaries with singular pomp. She
suspected him of nameless atrocities with regard to his daughter, as indeed she
had always suspected him of bullying his wife. Naturally she fell to comparing
her own fortunes with the fortunes of her friend, for Willoughby’s wife
had been perhaps the one woman Helen called friend, and this comparison often
made the staple of their talk. Ridley was a scholar, and Willoughby was a man
of business. Ridley was bringing out the third volume of Pindar when Willoughby
was launching his first ship. They built a new factory the very year the
commentary on Aristotle—was it?—appeared at the University Press.
“And Rachel,” she looked at her, meaning, no doubt, to decide the
argument, which was otherwise too evenly balanced, by declaring that Rachel was
not comparable to her own children. “She really might be six years
old,” was all she said, however, this judgment referring to the smooth
unmarked outline of the girl’s face, and not condemning her otherwise,
for if Rachel were ever to think, feel, laugh, or express herself, instead of
dropping milk from a height as though to see what kind of drops it made, she
might be interesting though never exactly pretty. She was like her mother, as
the image in a pool on a still summer’s day is like the vivid flushed
face that hangs over it.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Helen herself was under examination, though not from either of her
victims. Mr. Pepper considered her; and his meditations, carried on while he
cut his toast into bars and neatly buttered them, took him through a
considerable stretch of autobiography. One of his penetrating glances assured
him that he was right last night in judging that Helen was beautiful. Blandly
he passed her the jam. She was talking nonsense, but not worse nonsense than
people usually do talk at breakfast, the cerebral circulation, as he knew to
his cost, being apt to give trouble at that hour. He went on saying
“No” to her, on principle, for he never yielded to a woman on
account of her sex. And here, dropping his eyes to his plate, he became
autobiographical. He had not married himself for the sufficient reason that he
had never met a woman who commanded his respect. Condemned to pass the
susceptible years of youth in a railway station in Bombay, he had seen only
coloured women, military women, official women; and his ideal was a woman who
could read Greek, if not Persian, was irreproachably fair in the face, and able
to understand the small things he let fall while undressing. As it was he had
contracted habits of which he was not in the least ashamed. Certain odd minutes
every day went to learning things by heart; he never took a ticket without
noting the number; he devoted January to Petronius, February to Catullus, March
to the Etruscan vases perhaps; anyhow he had done good work in India, and there
was nothing to regret in his life except the fundamental defects which no wise
man regrets, when the present is still his. So concluding he looked up suddenly
and smiled. Rachel caught his eye.</p>
<p>“And now you’ve chewed something thirty-seven times, I
suppose?” she thought, but said politely aloud, “Are your legs
troubling you to-day, Mr. Pepper?”</p>
<p>“My shoulder blades?” he asked, shifting them painfully.
“Beauty has no effect upon uric acid that I’m aware of,” he
sighed, contemplating the round pane opposite, through which the sky and sea
showed blue. At the same time he took a little parchment volume from his pocket
and laid it on the table. As it was clear that he invited comment, Helen asked
him the name of it. She got the name; but she got also a disquisition upon the
proper method of making roads. Beginning with the Greeks, who had, he said,
many difficulties to contend with, he continued with the Romans, passed to
England and the right method, which speedily became the wrong method, and wound
up with such a fury of denunciation directed against the road-makers of the
present day in general, and the road-makers of Richmond Park in particular,
where Mr. Pepper had the habit of cycling every morning before breakfast, that
the spoons fairly jingled against the coffee cups, and the insides of at least
four rolls mounted in a heap beside Mr. Pepper’s plate.</p>
<p>“Pebbles!” he concluded, viciously dropping another bread pellet
upon the heap. “The roads of England are mended with pebbles! ‘With
the first heavy rainfall,’ I’ve told ’em, ‘your road
will be a swamp.’ Again and again my words have proved true. But
d’you suppose they listen to me when I tell ’em so, when I point
out the consequences, the consequences to the public purse, when I recommend
’em to read Coryphaeus? No, Mrs. Ambrose, you will form no just opinion
of the stupidity of mankind until you have sat upon a Borough Council!”
The little man fixed her with a glance of ferocious energy.</p>
<p>“I have had servants,” said Mrs. Ambrose, concentrating her gaze.
“At this moment I have a nurse. She’s a good woman as they go, but
she’s determined to make my children pray. So far, owing to great care on
my part, they think of God as a kind of walrus; but now that my back’s
turned—Ridley,” she demanded, swinging round upon her husband,
“what shall we do if we find them saying the Lord’s Prayer when we
get home again?”</p>
<p>Ridley made the sound which is represented by “Tush.” But
Willoughby, whose discomfort as he listened was manifested by a slight movement
rocking of his body, said awkwardly, “Oh, surely, Helen, a little
religion hurts nobody.”</p>
<p>“I would rather my children told lies,” she replied, and while
Willoughby was reflecting that his sister-in-law was even more eccentric than
he remembered, pushed her chair back and swept upstairs. In a second they heard
her calling back, “Oh, look! We’re out at sea!”</p>
<p>They followed her on to the deck. All the smoke and the houses had disappeared,
and the ship was out in a wide space of sea very fresh and clear though pale in
the early light. They had left London sitting on its mud. A very thin line of
shadow tapered on the horizon, scarcely thick enough to stand the burden of
Paris, which nevertheless rested upon it. They were free of roads, free of
mankind, and the same exhilaration at their freedom ran through them all. The
ship was making her way steadily through small waves which slapped her and then
fizzled like effervescing water, leaving a little border of bubbles and foam on
either side. The colourless October sky above was thinly clouded as if by the
trail of wood-fire smoke, and the air was wonderfully salt and brisk. Indeed it
was too cold to stand still. Mrs. Ambrose drew her arm within her
husband’s, and as they moved off it could be seen from the way in which
her sloping cheek turned up to his that she had something private to
communicate. They went a few paces and Rachel saw them kiss.</p>
<p>Down she looked into the depth of the sea. While it was slightly disturbed on
the surface by the passage of the <i>Euphrosyne</i>, beneath it was green and
dim, and it grew dimmer and dimmer until the sand at the bottom was only a pale
blur. One could scarcely see the black ribs of wrecked ships, or the spiral
towers made by the burrowings of great eels, or the smooth green-sided monsters
who came by flickering this way and that.</p>
<p>—“And, Rachel, if any one wants me, I’m busy till one,”
said her father, enforcing his words as he often did, when he spoke to his
daughter, by a smart blow upon the shoulder.</p>
<p>“Until one,” he repeated. “And you’ll find yourself
some employment, eh? Scales, French, a little German, eh? There’s Mr.
Pepper who knows more about separable verbs than any man in Europe, eh?”
and he went off laughing. Rachel laughed, too, as indeed she had laughed ever
since she could remember, without thinking it funny, but because she admired
her father.</p>
<p>But just as she was turning with a view perhaps to finding some employment, she
was intercepted by a woman who was so broad and so thick that to be intercepted
by her was inevitable. The discreet tentative way in which she moved, together
with her sober black dress, showed that she belonged to the lower orders;
nevertheless she took up a rock-like position, looking about her to see that no
gentry were near before she delivered her message, which had reference to the
state of the sheets, and was of the utmost gravity.</p>
<p>“How ever we’re to get through this voyage, Miss Rachel, I really
can’t tell,” she began with a shake of her head.
“There’s only just sheets enough to go round, and the
master’s has a rotten place you could put your fingers through. And the
counterpanes. Did you notice the counterpanes? I thought to myself a poor
person would have been ashamed of them. The one I gave Mr. Pepper was hardly
fit to cover a dog. . . . No, Miss Rachel, they could <i>not</i> be mended;
they’re only fit for dust sheets. Why, if one sewed one’s finger to
the bone, one would have one’s work undone the next time they went to the
laundry.”</p>
<p>Her voice in its indignation wavered as if tears were near.</p>
<p>There was nothing for it but to descend and inspect a large pile of linen
heaped upon a table. Mrs. Chailey handled the sheets as if she knew each by
name, character, and constitution. Some had yellow stains, others had places
where the threads made long ladders; but to the ordinary eye they looked much
as sheets usually do look, very chill, white, cold, and irreproachably clean.</p>
<p>Suddenly Mrs. Chailey, turning from the subject of sheets, dismissing them
entirely, clenched her fists on the top of them, and proclaimed, “And you
couldn’t ask a living creature to sit where I sit!”</p>
<p>Mrs. Chailey was expected to sit in a cabin which was large enough, but too
near the boilers, so that after five minutes she could hear her heart
“go,” she complained, putting her hand above it, which was a state
of things that Mrs. Vinrace, Rachel’s mother, would never have dreamt of
inflicting—Mrs. Vinrace, who knew every sheet in her house, and expected
of every one the best they could do, but no more.</p>
<p>It was the easiest thing in the world to grant another room, and the problem of
sheets simultaneously and miraculously solved itself, the spots and ladders not
being past cure after all, but—</p>
<p>“Lies! Lies! Lies!” exclaimed the mistress indignantly, as she ran
up on to the deck. “What’s the use of telling me lies?”</p>
<p>In her anger that a woman of fifty should behave like a child and come cringing
to a girl because she wanted to sit where she had not leave to sit, she did not
think of the particular case, and, unpacking her music, soon forgot all about
the old woman and her sheets.</p>
<p>Mrs. Chailey folded her sheets, but her expression testified to flatness
within. The world no longer cared about her, and a ship was not a home. When
the lamps were lit yesterday, and the sailors went tumbling above her head, she
had cried; she would cry this evening; she would cry to-morrow. It was not
home. Meanwhile she arranged her ornaments in the room which she had won too
easily. They were strange ornaments to bring on a sea voyage—china pugs,
tea-sets in miniature, cups stamped floridly with the arms of the city of
Bristol, hair-pin boxes crusted with shamrock, antelopes’ heads in
coloured plaster, together with a multitude of tiny photographs, representing
downright workmen in their Sunday best, and women holding white babies. But
there was one portrait in a gilt frame, for which a nail was needed, and before
she sought it Mrs. Chailey put on her spectacles and read what was written on a
slip of paper at the back:</p>
<p>“This picture of her mistress is given to Emma Chailey by Willoughby
Vinrace in gratitude for thirty years of devoted service.”</p>
<p>Tears obliterated the words and the head of the nail.</p>
<p>“So long as I can do something for your family,” she was saying, as
she hammered at it, when a voice called melodiously in the passage:</p>
<p>“Mrs. Chailey! Mrs. Chailey!”</p>
<p>Chailey instantly tidied her dress, composed her face, and opened the door.</p>
<p>“I’m in a fix,” said Mrs. Ambrose, who was flushed and out of
breath. “You know what gentlemen are. The chairs too high—the
tables too low—there’s six inches between the floor and the door.
What I want’s a hammer, an old quilt, and have you such a thing as a
kitchen table? Anyhow, between us”—she now flung open the door of
her husband’s sitting room, and revealed Ridley pacing up and down, his
forehead all wrinkled, and the collar of his coat turned up.</p>
<p>“It’s as though they’d taken pains to torment me!” he
cried, stopping dead. “Did I come on this voyage in order to catch
rheumatism and pneumonia? Really one might have credited Vinrace with more
sense. My dear,” Helen was on her knees under a table, “you are
only making yourself untidy, and we had much better recognise the fact that we
are condemned to six weeks of unspeakable misery. To come at all was the height
of folly, but now that we are here I suppose that I can face it like a man. My
diseases of course will be increased—I feel already worse than I did
yesterday, but we’ve only ourselves to thank, and the children
happily—”</p>
<p>“Move! Move! Move!” cried Helen, chasing him from corner to corner
with a chair as though he were an errant hen. “Out of the way, Ridley,
and in half an hour you’ll find it ready.”</p>
<p>She turned him out of the room, and they could hear him groaning and swearing
as he went along the passage.</p>
<p>“I daresay he isn’t very strong,” said Mrs. Chailey, looking
at Mrs. Ambrose compassionately, as she helped to shift and carry.</p>
<p>“It’s books,” sighed Helen, lifting an armful of sad volumes
from the floor to the shelf. “Greek from morning to night. If ever Miss
Rachel marries, Chailey, pray that she may marry a man who doesn’t know
his ABC.”</p>
<p>The preliminary discomforts and harshnesses, which generally make the first
days of a sea voyage so cheerless and trying to the temper, being somehow lived
through, the succeeding days passed pleasantly enough. October was well
advanced, but steadily burning with a warmth that made the early months of the
summer appear very young and capricious. Great tracts of the earth lay now
beneath the autumn sun, and the whole of England, from the bald moors to the
Cornish rocks, was lit up from dawn to sunset, and showed in stretches of
yellow, green, and purple. Under that illumination even the roofs of the great
towns glittered. In thousands of small gardens, millions of dark-red flowers
were blooming, until the old ladies who had tended them so carefully came down
the paths with their scissors, snipped through their juicy stalks, and laid
them upon cold stone ledges in the village church. Innumerable parties of
picnickers coming home at sunset cried, “Was there ever such a day as
this?” “It’s you,” the young men whispered; “Oh,
it’s you,” the young women replied. All old people and many sick
people were drawn, were it only for a foot or two, into the open air, and
prognosticated pleasant things about the course of the world. As for the
confidences and expressions of love that were heard not only in cornfields but
in lamplit rooms, where the windows opened on the garden, and men with cigars
kissed women with grey hairs, they were not to be counted. Some said that the
sky was an emblem of the life to come. Long-tailed birds clattered and
screamed, and crossed from wood to wood, with golden eyes in their plumage.</p>
<p>But while all this went on by land, very few people thought about the sea. They
took it for granted that the sea was calm; and there was no need, as there is
in many houses when the creeper taps on the bedroom windows, for the couples to
murmur before they kiss, “Think of the ships to-night,” or
“Thank Heaven, I’m not the man in the lighthouse!” For all
they imagined, the ships when they vanished on the sky-line dissolved, like
snow in water. The grown-up view, indeed, was not much clearer than the view of
the little creatures in bathing drawers who were trotting in to the foam all
along the coasts of England, and scooping up buckets full of water. They saw
white sails or tufts of smoke pass across the horizon, and if you had said that
these were waterspouts, or the petals of white sea flowers, they would have
agreed.</p>
<p>The people in ships, however, took an equally singular view of England. Not
only did it appear to them to be an island, and a very small island, but it was
a shrinking island in which people were imprisoned. One figured them first
swarming about like aimless ants, and almost pressing each other over the edge;
and then, as the ship withdrew, one figured them making a vain clamour, which,
being unheard, either ceased, or rose into a brawl. Finally, when the ship was
out of sight of land, it became plain that the people of England were
completely mute. The disease attacked other parts of the earth; Europe shrank,
Asia shrank, Africa and America shrank, until it seemed doubtful whether the
ship would ever run against any of those wrinkled little rocks again. But, on
the other hand, an immense dignity had descended upon her; she was an
inhabitant of the great world, which has so few inhabitants, travelling all day
across an empty universe, with veils drawn before her and behind. She was more
lonely than the caravan crossing the desert; she was infinitely more
mysterious, moving by her own power and sustained by her own resources. The sea
might give her death or some unexampled joy, and none would know of it. She was
a bride going forth to her husband, a virgin unknown of men; in her vigor and
purity she might be likened to all beautiful things, for as a ship she had a
life of her own.</p>
<p>Indeed if they had not been blessed in their weather, one blue day being bowled
up after another, smooth, round, and flawless, Mrs. Ambrose would have found it
very dull. As it was, she had her embroidery frame set up on deck, with a
little table by her side on which lay open a black volume of philosophy. She
chose a thread from the vari-coloured tangle that lay in her lap, and sewed red
into the bark of a tree, or yellow into the river torrent. She was working at a
great design of a tropical river running through a tropical forest, where
spotted deer would eventually browse upon masses of fruit, bananas, oranges,
and giant pomegranates, while a troop of naked natives whirled darts into the
air. Between the stitches she looked to one side and read a sentence about the
Reality of Matter, or the Nature of Good. Round her men in blue jerseys knelt
and scrubbed the boards, or leant over the rails and whistled, and not far off
Mr. Pepper sat cutting up roots with a penknife. The rest were occupied in
other parts of the ship: Ridley at his Greek—he had never found quarters
more to his liking; Willoughby at his documents, for he used a voyage to work
off arrears of business; and Rachel—Helen, between her sentences of
philosophy, wondered sometimes what Rachel <i>did</i> do with herself? She
meant vaguely to go and see. They had scarcely spoken two words to each other
since that first evening; they were polite when they met, but there had been no
confidence of any kind. Rachel seemed to get on very well with her
father—much better, Helen thought, than she ought to—and was as
ready to let Helen alone as Helen was to let her alone.</p>
<p>At that moment Rachel was sitting in her room doing absolutely nothing. When
the ship was full this apartment bore some magnificent title and was the resort
of elderly sea-sick ladies who left the deck to their youngsters. By virtue of
the piano, and a mess of books on the floor, Rachel considered it her room, and
there she would sit for hours playing very difficult music, reading a little
German, or a little English when the mood took her, and doing—as at this
moment—absolutely nothing.</p>
<p>The way she had been educated, joined to a fine natural indolence, was of
course partly the reason of it, for she had been educated as the majority of
well-to-do girls in the last part of the nineteenth century were educated.
Kindly doctors and gentle old professors had taught her the rudiments of about
ten different branches of knowledge, but they would as soon have forced her to
go through one piece of drudgery thoroughly as they would have told her that
her hands were dirty. The one hour or the two hours weekly passed very
pleasantly, partly owing to the other pupils, partly to the fact that the
window looked upon the back of a shop, where figures appeared against the red
windows in winter, partly to the accidents that are bound to happen when more
than two people are in the same room together. But there was no subject in the
world which she knew accurately. Her mind was in the state of an intelligent
man’s in the beginning of the reign of Queen Elizabeth; she would believe
practically anything she was told, invent reasons for anything she said. The
shape of the earth, the history of the world, how trains worked, or money was
invested, what laws were in force, which people wanted what, and why they
wanted it, the most elementary idea of a system in modern life—none of
this had been imparted to her by any of her professors or mistresses. But this
system of education had one great advantage. It did not teach anything, but it
put no obstacle in the way of any real talent that the pupil might chance to
have. Rachel, being musical, was allowed to learn nothing but music; she became
a fanatic about music. All the energies that might have gone into languages,
science, or literature, that might have made her friends, or shown her the
world, poured straight into music. Finding her teachers inadequate, she had
practically taught herself. At the age of twenty-four she knew as much about
music as most people do when they are thirty; and could play as well as nature
allowed her to, which, as became daily more obvious, was a really generous
allowance. If this one definite gift was surrounded by dreams and ideas of the
most extravagant and foolish description, no one was any the wiser.</p>
<p>Her education being thus ordinary, her circumstances were no more out of the
common. She was an only child and had never been bullied and laughed at by
brothers and sisters. Her mother having died when she was eleven, two aunts,
the sisters of her father, brought her up, and they lived for the sake of the
air in a comfortable house in Richmond. She was of course brought up with
excessive care, which as a child was for her health; as a girl and a young
woman was for what it seems almost crude to call her morals. Until quite lately
she had been completely ignorant that for women such things existed. She groped
for knowledge in old books, and found it in repulsive chunks, but she did not
naturally care for books and thus never troubled her head about the censorship
which was exercised first by her aunts, later by her father. Friends might have
told her things, but she had few of her own age,—Richmond being an
awkward place to reach,—and, as it happened, the only girl she knew well
was a religious zealot, who in the fervour of intimacy talked about God, and
the best ways of taking up one’s cross, a topic only fitfully interesting
to one whose mind reached other stages at other times.</p>
<p>But lying in her chair, with one hand behind her head, the other grasping the
knob on the arm, she was clearly following her thoughts intently. Her education
left her abundant time for thinking. Her eyes were fixed so steadily upon a
ball on the rail of the ship that she would have been startled and annoyed if
anything had chanced to obscure it for a second. She had begun her meditations
with a shout of laughter, caused by the following translation from
<i>Tristan</i>:</p>
<p class="poem">
In shrinking trepidation<br/>
His shame he seems to hide<br/>
While to the king his relation<br/>
He brings the corpse-like Bride.<br/>
Seems it so senseless what I say?</p>
<p>She cried that it did, and threw down the book. Next she had picked up
<i>Cowper’s Letters</i>, the classic prescribed by her father which had
bored her, so that one sentence chancing to say something about the smell of
broom in his garden, she had thereupon seen the little hall at Richmond laden
with flowers on the day of her mother’s funeral, smelling so strong that
now any flower-scent brought back the sickly horrible sensation; and so from
one scene she passed, half-hearing, half-seeing, to another. She saw her Aunt
Lucy arranging flowers in the drawing-room.</p>
<p>“Aunt Lucy,” she volunteered, “I don’t like the smell
of broom; it reminds me of funerals.”</p>
<p>“Nonsense, Rachel,” Aunt Lucy replied; “don’t say such
foolish things, dear. I always think it a particularly cheerful plant.”</p>
<p>Lying in the hot sun her mind was fixed upon the characters of her aunts, their
views, and the way they lived. Indeed this was a subject that lasted her
hundreds of morning walks round Richmond Park, and blotted out the trees and
the people and the deer. Why did they do the things they did, and what did they
feel, and what was it all about? Again she heard Aunt Lucy talking to Aunt
Eleanor. She had been that morning to take up the character of a servant,
“And, of course, at half-past ten in the morning one expects to find the
housemaid brushing the stairs.” How odd! How unspeakably odd! But she
could not explain to herself why suddenly as her aunt spoke the whole system in
which they lived had appeared before her eyes as something quite unfamiliar and
inexplicable, and themselves as chairs or umbrellas dropped about here and
there without any reason. She could only say with her slight stammer,
“Are you f-f-fond of Aunt Eleanor, Aunt Lucy?” to which her aunt
replied, with her nervous hen-like twitter of a laugh, “My dear child,
what questions you do ask!”</p>
<p>“How fond? Very fond!” Rachel pursued.</p>
<p>“I can’t say I’ve ever thought ‘how,’” said
Miss Vinrace. “If one cares one doesn’t think ‘how,’
Rachel,” which was aimed at the niece who had never yet
“come” to her aunts as cordially as they wished.</p>
<p>“But you know I care for you, don’t you, dear, because you’re
your mother’s daughter, if for no other reason, and there <i>are</i>
plenty of other reasons”—and she leant over and kissed her with
some emotion, and the argument was spilt irretrievably about the place like a
bucket of milk.</p>
<p>By these means Rachel reached that stage in thinking, if thinking it can be
called, when the eyes are intent upon a ball or a knob and the lips cease to
move. Her efforts to come to an understanding had only hurt her aunt’s
feelings, and the conclusion must be that it is better not to try. To feel
anything strongly was to create an abyss between oneself and others who feel
strongly perhaps but differently. It was far better to play the piano and
forget all the rest. The conclusion was very welcome. Let these odd men and
women—her aunts, the Hunts, Ridley, Helen, Mr. Pepper, and the
rest—be symbols,—featureless but dignified, symbols of age, of
youth, of motherhood, of learning, and beautiful often as people upon the stage
are beautiful. It appeared that nobody ever said a thing they meant, or ever
talked of a feeling they felt, but that was what music was for. Reality
dwelling in what one saw and felt, but did not talk about, one could accept a
system in which things went round and round quite satisfactorily to other
people, without often troubling to think about it, except as something
superficially strange. Absorbed by her music she accepted her lot very
complacently, blazing into indignation perhaps once a fortnight, and subsiding
as she subsided now. Inextricably mixed in dreamy confusion, her mind seemed to
enter into communion, to be delightfully expanded and combined with the spirit
of the whitish boards on deck, with the spirit of the sea, with the spirit of
Beethoven Op. 112, even with the spirit of poor William Cowper there at Olney.
Like a ball of thistledown it kissed the sea, rose, kissed it again, and thus
rising and kissing passed finally out of sight. The rising and falling of the
ball of thistledown was represented by the sudden droop forward of her own
head, and when it passed out of sight she was asleep.</p>
<p>Ten minutes later Mrs. Ambrose opened the door and looked at her. It did not
surprise her to find that this was the way in which Rachel passed her mornings.
She glanced round the room at the piano, at the books, at the general mess. In
the first place she considered Rachel aesthetically; lying unprotected she
looked somehow like a victim dropped from the claws of a bird of prey, but
considered as a woman, a young woman of twenty-four, the sight gave rise to
reflections. Mrs. Ambrose stood thinking for at least two minutes. She then
smiled, turned noiselessly away and went, lest the sleeper should waken, and
there should be the awkwardness of speech between them.</p>
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