<SPAN name="chap13"></SPAN>
<h3> XIII. </h3>
<p>It was a changed London to which Herminia returned. She was
homeless, penniless, friendless. Above all she was declassee.
The world that had known her now knew her no more. Women who had
smothered her with their Judas kisses passed her by in their
victorias with a stony stare. Even men pretended to be looking the
other way, or crossed the street to avoid the necessity for
recognizing her. "So awkward to be mixed up with such a scandal!"
She hardly knew as yet herself how much her world was changed
indeed; for had she not come back to it, the mother of an
illegitimate daughter? But she began to suspect it the very first
day when she arrived at Charing Cross, clad in a plain black dress,
with her baby at her bosom. Her first task was to find rooms; her
next to find a livelihood. Even the first involved no small
relapse from the purity of her principles. After long hours of
vain hunting, she found at last she could only get lodgings for
herself and Alan's child by telling a virtual lie, against which
her soul revolted. She was forced to describe herself as Mrs.
Barton; she must allow her landlady to suppose she was really a
widow. Woe unto you, scribes and hypocrites! in all Christian
London MISS Barton and her baby could never have found a
"respectable" room in which to lay their heads. So she yielded to
the inevitable, and took two tiny attics in a small street off the
Edgware Road at a moderate rental. To live alone in a cottage as
of yore would have been impossible now she had a baby of her own to
tend, besides earning her livelihood; she fell back regretfully on
the lesser evil of lodgings.</p>
<p>To earn her livelihood was a hard task, though Herminia's
indomitable energy rode down all obstacles. Teaching, of course,
was now quite out of the question; no English parent could intrust
the education of his daughters to the hands of a woman who has
dared and suffered much, for conscience' sake, in the cause of
freedom for herself and her sisters. But even before Herminia
went away to Perugia, she had acquired some small journalistic
connection; and now, in her hour of need, she found not a few of
the journalistic leaders by no means unwilling to sympathize and
fraternize with her. To be sure, they didn't ask the free woman to
their homes, nor invite her to meet their own women:—even an
enlightened journalist must draw a line somewhere in the matter of
society; but they understood and appreciated the sincerity of her
motives, and did what they could to find employment and salary for
her. Herminia was an honest and conscientious worker; she knew
much about many things; and nature had gifted her with the
instinctive power of writing clearly and unaffectedly the English
language. So she got on with editors. Who could resist, indeed,
the pathetic charm of that girlish figure, simply clad in
unobtrusive black, and sanctified in every feature of the shrinking
face by the beauty of sorrow? Not the men who stand at the head of
the one English profession which more than all others has escaped
the leprous taint of that national moral blight that calls itself
"respectability."</p>
<p>In a slow and tentative way, then, Herminia crept back into
unrecognized recognition. It was all she needed. Companionship
she liked; she hated society. That mart was odious to her where
women barter their bodies for a title, a carriage, a place at the
head of some rich man's table. Bohemia sufficed her. Her terrible
widowhood, too, was rendered less terrible to her by the care of
her little one. Babbling lips, pattering feet, made heaven in her
attic. Every good woman is by nature a mother, and finds best in
maternity her social and moral salvation. She shall be saved in
child-bearing. Herminia was far removed indeed from that blatant
and decadent sect of "advanced women" who talk as though motherhood
were a disgrace and a burden, instead of being, as it is, the full
realization of woman's faculties, the natural outlet for woman's
wealth of emotion. She knew that to be a mother is the best
privilege of her sex, a privilege of which unholy manmade
institutions now conspire to deprive half the finest and noblest
women in our civilized communities. Widowed as she was, she still
pitied the unhappy beings doomed to the cramped life and dwarfed
heart of the old maid; pitied them as sincerely as she despised
those unhealthy souls who would make of celibacy, wedded or
unwedded, a sort of anti-natural religion for women. Alan's death,
however, had left Herminia's ship rudderless. Her mission had
failed. That she acknowledged herself. She lived now for Dolores.
The child to whom she had given the noble birthright of liberty was
destined from her cradle to the apostolate of women. Alone of her
sex, she would start in life emancipated. While others must say,
"With a great sum obtained I this freedom," Dolores could answer
with Paul, "But I was free born." That was no mean heritage.</p>
<p>Gradually Herminia got work to her mind; work enough to support her
in the modest way that sufficed her small wants for herself and her
baby. In London, given time enough, you can live down anything,
perhaps even the unspeakable sin of having struck a righteous blow
in the interest of women. And day by day, as months and years went
on, Herminia felt she was living down the disgrace of having obeyed
an enlightened conscience. She even found friends. Dear old Miss
Smith-Waters used to creep round by night, like Nicodemus—respectability
would not have allowed her to perform that Christian act in open
daylight,—and sit for an hour or two with her dear misguided
Herminia. Miss Smith-Waters prayed nightly for Herminia's
"conversion," yet not without an uncomfortable suspicion, after
all, that Herminia had very little indeed to be "converted" from.
Other people also got to know her by degrees; an editor's wife;
a kind literary hostess; some socialistic ladies who liked to be
"advanced;" a friendly family or two of the Bohemian literary or
artistic pattern. Among them Herminia learned to be as happy in
time as she could ever again be, now she had lost her Alan. She
was Mrs. Barton to them all; that lie she found it practically
impossible to fight against. Even the Bohemians refused to let
their children ask after Miss Barton's baby.</p>
<p>So wrapt in vile falsehoods and conventions are we. So far have we
travelled from the pristine realities of truth and purity. We lie
to our children—in the interests of morality.</p>
<p>After a time, in the intervals between doing her journalistic work
and nursing Alan's baby, Herminia found leisure to write a novel.
It was seriously meant, of course, but still it was a novel. That
is every woman's native idea of literature. It reflects the
relatively larger part which the social life plays in the existence
of women. If a man tells you he wants to write a book, nine times
out of ten he means a treatise or argument on some subject that
interests him. Even the men who take in the end to writing novels
have generally begun with other aims and other aspirations, and
have only fallen back upon the art of fiction in the last resort as
a means of livelihood. But when a woman tells you she wants to
write a book, nine times out of ten she means she wants to write a
novel. For that task nature has most often endowed her richly.
Her quicker intuitions, her keener interest in social life, her
deeper insight into the passing play of emotions and of motives,
enable her to paint well the complex interrelations of every-day
existence. So Herminia, like the rest, wrote her own pet novel.</p>
<p>By the time her baby was eighteen months old, she had finished it.
It was blankly pessimistic, of course. Blank pessimism is the one
creed possible for all save fools. To hold any other is to curl
yourself up selfishly in your own easy chair, and say to your soul,
"O soul, eat and drink; O soul, make merry. Carouse thy fill.
Ignore the maimed lives, the stricken heads and seared hearts,
the reddened fangs and ravening claws of nature all round thee."
Pessimism is sympathy. Optimism is selfishness. The optimist
folds his smug hands on his ample knees, and murmurs contentedly,
"The Lord has willed it;" "There must always be rich and poor;"
"Nature has, after all, her great law of compensation." The
pessimist knows well self-deception like that is either a fraud or
a blind, and recognizing the seething mass of misery at his doors
gives what he can,—his pity, or, where possible, his faint aid, in
redressing the crying inequalities and injustices of man or nature.</p>
<p>All honest art is therefore of necessity pessimistic. Herminia's
romance was something more than that. It was the despairing
heart-cry of a soul in revolt. It embodied the experiences and
beliefs and sentiments of a martyred woman. It enclosed a lofty
ethical purpose. She wrote it with fiery energy, for her baby's
sake, on waste scraps of paper, at stray moments snatched from
endless other engagements. And as soon as it was finished, she sent
it in fear and trembling to a publisher.</p>
<p>She had chosen her man well. He was a thinker himself, and he
sympathized with thinkers. Though doubtful as to the venture, he
took all the risk himself with that generosity one so often sees in
the best-abused of professions. In three or four weeks' time "A
Woman's World" came out, and Herminia waited in breathless anxiety
for the verdict of the reviewers.</p>
<p>For nearly a month she waited in vain. Then, one Friday, as she
was returning by underground railway from the Strand to Edgeware
Road, with Dolores in her arms, her eye fell as she passed upon the
display-bill of the "Spectator." Sixpence was a great deal of
money to Herminia; but bang it went recklessly when she saw among
the contents an article headed, "A Very Advanced Woman's Novel."
She felt sure it must be hers, and she was not mistaken.
Breathlessly she ran over that first estimate of her work.
It was with no little elation that she laid down the number.</p>
<p>Not that the critique was by any means at all favorable. How could
Herminia expect it in such a quarter? But the "Spectator" is at
least conspicuously fair, though it remains in other ways an
interesting and ivy-clad mediaeval relic. "Let us begin by
admitting," said the Spectatorial scribe, "that Miss Montague's
book" (she had published it under a pseudonym) "is a work of
genius. Much as we dislike its whole tone, and still more its
conclusions, the gleam of pure genius shines forth undeniable on
every page of it. Whoever takes it up must read on against his
will till he has finished the last line of this terrible tragedy; a
hateful fascination seems to hold and compel him. Its very purity
makes it dangerous. The book is mistaken; the book is poisonous;
the book is morbid; the book is calculated to do irremediable
mischief; but in spite of all that, the book is a book of
undeniable and sadly misplaced genius."</p>
<p>If he had said no more, Herminia would have been amply satisfied.
To be called morbid by the "Spectator" is a sufficient proof that
you have hit at least the right tack in morals. And to be accused
of genius as well was indeed a triumph. No wonder Herminia went
home to her lonely attic that night justifiably elated. She
fancied after this her book must make a hit. It might be blamed
and reviled, but at any rate it was now safe from the ignominy of
oblivion.</p>
<p>Alas, how little she knew of the mysteries of the book-market! As
little as all the rest of us. Day after day, from that afternoon
forth, she watched in vain for succeeding notices. Not a single
other paper in England reviewed her. At the libraries, her romance
was never so much as asked for. And the reason for these phenomena
is not far to seek by those who know the ways of the British public.
For her novel was earnestly and sincerely written; it breathed a
moral air, therefore it was voted dull; therefore nobody cared for
it. The "Spectator" had noticed it because of its manifest
earnestness and sincerity; for though the "Spectator" is always on
the side of the lie and the wrong, it is earnest and sincere, and
has a genuine sympathy for earnestness and sincerity, even on the
side of truth and righteousness. Nobody else even looked at it.
People said to themselves, "This book seems to be a book with a
teaching not thoroughly banal, like the novels-with-a-purpose after
which we flock; so we'll give it a wide berth."</p>
<p>And they shunned it accordingly.</p>
<p>That was the end of Herminia Barton's literary aspirations. She
had given the people of her best, and the people rejected it. Now
she gave them of her most mediocre; the nearest to their own level
of thought and feeling to which her hand could reduce itself. And
the people accepted it. The rest of her life was hack-work; by
that, she could at least earn a living for Dolores. Her "Antigone,
for the Use of Ladies' Schools" still holds its own at Girton and
Somerville.</p>
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