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<h2> CHAPTER III </h2>
<p>Denham had accused Katharine Hilbery of belonging to one of the most
distinguished families in England, and if any one will take the trouble to
consult Mr. Galton's "Hereditary Genius," he will find that this assertion
is not far from the truth. The Alardyces, the Hilberys, the Millingtons,
and the Otways seem to prove that intellect is a possession which can be
tossed from one member of a certain group to another almost indefinitely,
and with apparent certainty that the brilliant gift will be safely caught
and held by nine out of ten of the privileged race. They had been
conspicuous judges and admirals, lawyers and servants of the State for
some years before the richness of the soil culminated in the rarest flower
that any family can boast, a great writer, a poet eminent among the poets
of England, a Richard Alardyce; and having produced him, they proved once
more the amazing virtues of their race by proceeding unconcernedly again
with their usual task of breeding distinguished men. They had sailed with
Sir John Franklin to the North Pole, and ridden with Havelock to the
Relief of Lucknow, and when they were not lighthouses firmly based on rock
for the guidance of their generation, they were steady, serviceable
candles, illuminating the ordinary chambers of daily life. Whatever
profession you looked at, there was a Warburton or an Alardyce, a
Millington or a Hilbery somewhere in authority and prominence.</p>
<p>It may be said, indeed, that English society being what it is, no very
great merit is required, once you bear a well-known name, to put you into
a position where it is easier on the whole to be eminent than obscure. And
if this is true of the sons, even the daughters, even in the nineteenth
century, are apt to become people of importance—philanthropists and
educationalists if they are spinsters, and the wives of distinguished men
if they marry. It is true that there were several lamentable exceptions to
this rule in the Alardyce group, which seems to indicate that the cadets
of such houses go more rapidly to the bad than the children of ordinary
fathers and mothers, as if it were somehow a relief to them. But, on the
whole, in these first years of the twentieth century, the Alardyces and
their relations were keeping their heads well above water. One finds them
at the tops of professions, with letters after their names; they sit in
luxurious public offices, with private secretaries attached to them; they
write solid books in dark covers, issued by the presses of the two great
universities, and when one of them dies the chances are that another of
them writes his biography.</p>
<p>Now the source of this nobility was, of course, the poet, and his
immediate descendants, therefore, were invested with greater luster than
the collateral branches. Mrs. Hilbery, in virtue of her position as the
only child of the poet, was spiritually the head of the family, and
Katharine, her daughter, had some superior rank among all the cousins and
connections, the more so because she was an only child. The Alardyces had
married and intermarried, and their offspring were generally profuse, and
had a way of meeting regularly in each other's houses for meals and family
celebrations which had acquired a semi-sacred character, and were as
regularly observed as days of feasting and fasting in the Church.</p>
<p>In times gone by, Mrs. Hilbery had known all the poets, all the novelists,
all the beautiful women and distinguished men of her time. These being now
either dead or secluded in their infirm glory, she made her house a
meeting-place for her own relations, to whom she would lament the passing
of the great days of the nineteenth century, when every department of
letters and art was represented in England by two or three illustrious
names. Where are their successors? she would ask, and the absence of any
poet or painter or novelist of the true caliber at the present day was a
text upon which she liked to ruminate, in a sunset mood of benignant
reminiscence, which it would have been hard to disturb had there been
need. But she was far from visiting their inferiority upon the younger
generation. She welcomed them very heartily to her house, told them her
stories, gave them sovereigns and ices and good advice, and weaved round
them romances which had generally no likeness to the truth.</p>
<p>The quality of her birth oozed into Katharine's consciousness from a dozen
different sources as soon as she was able to perceive anything. Above her
nursery fireplace hung a photograph of her grandfather's tomb in Poets'
Corner, and she was told in one of those moments of grown-up confidence
which are so tremendously impressive to the child's mind, that he was
buried there because he was a "good and great man." Later, on an
anniversary, she was taken by her mother through the fog in a hansom cab,
and given a large bunch of bright, sweet-scented flowers to lay upon his
tomb. The candles in the church, the singing and the booming of the organ,
were all, she thought, in his honor. Again and again she was brought down
into the drawing-room to receive the blessing of some awful distinguished
old man, who sat, even to her childish eye, somewhat apart, all gathered
together and clutching a stick, unlike an ordinary visitor in her father's
own arm-chair, and her father himself was there, unlike himself, too, a
little excited and very polite. These formidable old creatures used to
take her in their arms, look very keenly in her eyes, and then to bless
her, and tell her that she must mind and be a good girl, or detect a look
in her face something like Richard's as a small boy. That drew down upon
her her mother's fervent embrace, and she was sent back to the nursery
very proud, and with a mysterious sense of an important and unexplained
state of things, which time, by degrees, unveiled to her.</p>
<p>There were always visitors—uncles and aunts and cousins "from
India," to be reverenced for their relationship alone, and others of the
solitary and formidable class, whom she was enjoined by her parents to
"remember all your life." By these means, and from hearing constant talk
of great men and their works, her earliest conceptions of the world
included an august circle of beings to whom she gave the names of
Shakespeare, Milton, Wordsworth, Shelley, and so on, who were, for some
reason, much more nearly akin to the Hilberys than to other people. They
made a kind of boundary to her vision of life, and played a considerable
part in determining her scale of good and bad in her own small affairs.
Her descent from one of these gods was no surprise to her, but matter for
satisfaction, until, as the years wore on, the privileges of her lot were
taken for granted, and certain drawbacks made themselves very manifest.
Perhaps it is a little depressing to inherit not lands but an example of
intellectual and spiritual virtue; perhaps the conclusiveness of a great
ancestor is a little discouraging to those who run the risk of comparison
with him. It seems as if, having flowered so splendidly, nothing now
remained possible but a steady growth of good, green stalk and leaf. For
these reasons, and for others, Katharine had her moments of despondency.
The glorious past, in which men and women grew to unexampled size,
intruded too much upon the present, and dwarfed it too consistently, to be
altogether encouraging to one forced to make her experiment in living when
the great age was dead.</p>
<p>She was drawn to dwell upon these matters more than was natural, in the
first place owing to her mother's absorption in them, and in the second
because a great part of her time was spent in imagination with the dead,
since she was helping her mother to produce a life of the great poet. When
Katharine was seventeen or eighteen—that is to say, some ten years
ago—her mother had enthusiastically announced that now, with a
daughter to help her, the biography would soon be published. Notices to
this effect found their way into the literary papers, and for some time
Katharine worked with a sense of great pride and achievement.</p>
<p>Lately, however, it had seemed to her that they were making no way at all,
and this was the more tantalizing because no one with the ghost of a
literary temperament could doubt but that they had materials for one of
the greatest biographies that has ever been written. Shelves and boxes
bulged with the precious stuff. The most private lives of the most
interesting people lay furled in yellow bundles of close-written
manuscript. In addition to this Mrs. Hilbery had in her own head as bright
a vision of that time as now remained to the living, and could give those
flashes and thrills to the old words which gave them almost the substance
of flesh. She had no difficulty in writing, and covered a page every
morning as instinctively as a thrush sings, but nevertheless, with all
this to urge and inspire, and the most devout intention to accomplish the
work, the book still remained unwritten. Papers accumulated without much
furthering their task, and in dull moments Katharine had her doubts
whether they would ever produce anything at all fit to lay before the
public. Where did the difficulty lie? Not in their materials, alas! nor in
their ambitions, but in something more profound, in her own inaptitude,
and above all, in her mother's temperament. Katharine would calculate that
she had never known her write for more than ten minutes at a time. Ideas
came to her chiefly when she was in motion. She liked to perambulate the
room with a duster in her hand, with which she stopped to polish the backs
of already lustrous books, musing and romancing as she did so. Suddenly
the right phrase or the penetrating point of view would suggest itself,
and she would drop her duster and write ecstatically for a few breathless
moments; and then the mood would pass away, and the duster would be sought
for, and the old books polished again. These spells of inspiration never
burnt steadily, but flickered over the gigantic mass of the subject as
capriciously as a will-o'-the-wisp, lighting now on this point, now on
that. It was as much as Katharine could do to keep the pages of her
mother's manuscript in order, but to sort them so that the sixteenth year
of Richard Alardyce's life succeeded the fifteenth was beyond her skill.
And yet they were so brilliant, these paragraphs, so nobly phrased, so
lightning-like in their illumination, that the dead seemed to crowd the
very room. Read continuously, they produced a sort of vertigo, and set her
asking herself in despair what on earth she was to do with them? Her
mother refused, also, to face the radical questions of what to leave in
and what to leave out. She could not decide how far the public was to be
told the truth about the poet's separation from his wife. She drafted
passages to suit either case, and then liked each so well that she could
not decide upon the rejection of either.</p>
<p>But the book must be written. It was a duty that they owed the world, and
to Katharine, at least, it meant more than that, for if they could not
between them get this one book accomplished they had no right to their
privileged position. Their increment became yearly more and more unearned.
Besides, it must be established indisputably that her grandfather was a
very great man.</p>
<p>By the time she was twenty-seven, these thoughts had become very familiar
to her. They trod their way through her mind as she sat opposite her
mother of a morning at a table heaped with bundles of old letters and well
supplied with pencils, scissors, bottles of gum, india-rubber bands, large
envelopes, and other appliances for the manufacture of books. Shortly
before Ralph Denham's visit, Katharine had resolved to try the effect of
strict rules upon her mother's habits of literary composition. They were
to be seated at their tables every morning at ten o'clock, with a
clean-swept morning of empty, secluded hours before them. They were to
keep their eyes fast upon the paper, and nothing was to tempt them to
speech, save at the stroke of the hour when ten minutes for relaxation
were to be allowed them. If these rules were observed for a year, she made
out on a sheet of paper that the completion of the book was certain, and
she laid her scheme before her mother with a feeling that much of the task
was already accomplished. Mrs. Hilbery examined the sheet of paper very
carefully. Then she clapped her hands and exclaimed enthusiastically:</p>
<p>"Well done, Katharine! What a wonderful head for business you've got! Now
I shall keep this before me, and every day I shall make a little mark in
my pocketbook, and on the last day of all—let me think, what shall
we do to celebrate the last day of all? If it weren't the winter we could
take a jaunt to Italy. They say Switzerland's very lovely in the snow,
except for the cold. But, as you say, the great thing is to finish the
book. Now let me see—"</p>
<p>When they inspected her manuscripts, which Katharine had put in order,
they found a state of things well calculated to dash their spirits, if
they had not just resolved on reform. They found, to begin with, a great
variety of very imposing paragraphs with which the biography was to open;
many of these, it is true, were unfinished, and resembled triumphal arches
standing upon one leg, but, as Mrs. Hilbery observed, they could be
patched up in ten minutes, if she gave her mind to it. Next, there was an
account of the ancient home of the Alardyces, or rather, of spring in
Suffolk, which was very beautifully written, although not essential to the
story. However, Katharine had put together a string of names and dates, so
that the poet was capably brought into the world, and his ninth year was
reached without further mishap. After that, Mrs. Hilbery wished, for
sentimental reasons, to introduce the recollections of a very fluent old
lady, who had been brought up in the same village, but these Katharine
decided must go. It might be advisable to introduce here a sketch of
contemporary poetry contributed by Mr. Hilbery, and thus terse and learned
and altogether out of keeping with the rest, but Mrs. Hilbery was of
opinion that it was too bare, and made one feel altogether like a good
little girl in a lecture-room, which was not at all in keeping with her
father. It was put on one side. Now came the period of his early manhood,
when various affairs of the heart must either be concealed or revealed;
here again Mrs. Hilbery was of two minds, and a thick packet of manuscript
was shelved for further consideration.</p>
<p>Several years were now altogether omitted, because Mrs. Hilbery had found
something distasteful to her in that period, and had preferred to dwell
upon her own recollections as a child. After this, it seemed to Katharine
that the book became a wild dance of will-o'-the-wisps, without form or
continuity, without coherence even, or any attempt to make a narrative.
Here were twenty pages upon her grandfather's taste in hats, an essay upon
contemporary china, a long account of a summer day's expedition into the
country, when they had missed their train, together with fragmentary
visions of all sorts of famous men and women, which seemed to be partly
imaginary and partly authentic. There were, moreover, thousands of
letters, and a mass of faithful recollections contributed by old friends,
which had grown yellow now in their envelopes, but must be placed
somewhere, or their feelings would be hurt. So many volumes had been
written about the poet since his death that she had also to dispose of a
great number of misstatements, which involved minute researches and much
correspondence. Sometimes Katharine brooded, half crushed, among her
papers; sometimes she felt that it was necessary for her very existence
that she should free herself from the past; at others, that the past had
completely displaced the present, which, when one resumed life after a
morning among the dead, proved to be of an utterly thin and inferior
composition.</p>
<p>The worst of it was that she had no aptitude for literature. She did not
like phrases. She had even some natural antipathy to that process of
self-examination, that perpetual effort to understand one's own feeling,
and express it beautifully, fitly, or energetically in language, which
constituted so great a part of her mother's existence. She was, on the
contrary, inclined to be silent; she shrank from expressing herself even
in talk, let alone in writing. As this disposition was highly convenient
in a family much given to the manufacture of phrases, and seemed to argue
a corresponding capacity for action, she was, from her childhood even, put
in charge of household affairs. She had the reputation, which nothing in
her manner contradicted, of being the most practical of people. Ordering
meals, directing servants, paying bills, and so contriving that every
clock ticked more or less accurately in time, and a number of vases were
always full of fresh flowers was supposed to be a natural endowment of
hers, and, indeed, Mrs. Hilbery often observed that it was poetry the
wrong side out. From a very early age, too, she had to exert herself in
another capacity; she had to counsel and help and generally sustain her
mother. Mrs. Hilbery would have been perfectly well able to sustain
herself if the world had been what the world is not. She was beautifully
adapted for life in another planet. But the natural genius she had for
conducting affairs there was of no real use to her here. Her watch, for
example, was a constant source of surprise to her, and at the age of
sixty-five she was still amazed at the ascendancy which rules and reasons
exerted over the lives of other people. She had never learnt her lesson,
and had constantly to be punished for her ignorance. But as that ignorance
was combined with a fine natural insight which saw deep whenever it saw at
all, it was not possible to write Mrs. Hilbery off among the dunces; on
the contrary, she had a way of seeming the wisest person in the room. But,
on the whole, she found it very necessary to seek support in her daughter.</p>
<p>Katharine, thus, was a member of a very great profession which has, as
yet, no title and very little recognition, although the labor of mill and
factory is, perhaps, no more severe and the results of less benefit to the
world. She lived at home. She did it very well, too. Any one coming to the
house in Cheyne Walk felt that here was an orderly place, shapely,
controlled—a place where life had been trained to show to the best
advantage, and, though composed of different elements, made to appear
harmonious and with a character of its own. Perhaps it was the chief
triumph of Katharine's art that Mrs. Hilbery's character predominated. She
and Mr. Hilbery appeared to be a rich background for her mother's more
striking qualities.</p>
<p>Silence being, thus, both natural to her and imposed upon her, the only
other remark that her mother's friends were in the habit of making about
it was that it was neither a stupid silence nor an indifferent silence.
But to what quality it owed its character, since character of some sort it
had, no one troubled themselves to inquire. It was understood that she was
helping her mother to produce a great book. She was known to manage the
household. She was certainly beautiful. That accounted for her
satisfactorily. But it would have been a surprise, not only to other
people but to Katharine herself, if some magic watch could have taken
count of the moments spent in an entirely different occupation from her
ostensible one. Sitting with faded papers before her, she took part in a
series of scenes such as the taming of wild ponies upon the American
prairies, or the conduct of a vast ship in a hurricane round a black
promontory of rock, or in others more peaceful, but marked by her complete
emancipation from her present surroundings and, needless to say, by her
surpassing ability in her new vocation. When she was rid of the pretense
of paper and pen, phrase-making and biography, she turned her attention in
a more legitimate direction, though, strangely enough, she would rather
have confessed her wildest dreams of hurricane and prairie than the fact
that, upstairs, alone in her room, she rose early in the morning or sat up
late at night to... work at mathematics. No force on earth would have made
her confess that. Her actions when thus engaged were furtive and
secretive, like those of some nocturnal animal. Steps had only to sound on
the staircase, and she slipped her paper between the leaves of a great
Greek dictionary which she had purloined from her father's room for this
purpose. It was only at night, indeed, that she felt secure enough from
surprise to concentrate her mind to the utmost.</p>
<p>Perhaps the unwomanly nature of the science made her instinctively wish to
conceal her love of it. But the more profound reason was that in her mind
mathematics were directly opposed to literature. She would not have cared
to confess how infinitely she preferred the exactitude, the star-like
impersonality, of figures to the confusion, agitation, and vagueness of
the finest prose. There was something a little unseemly in thus opposing
the tradition of her family; something that made her feel wrong-headed,
and thus more than ever disposed to shut her desires away from view and
cherish them with extraordinary fondness. Again and again she was thinking
of some problem when she should have been thinking of her grandfather.
Waking from these trances, she would see that her mother, too, had lapsed
into some dream almost as visionary as her own, for the people who played
their parts in it had long been numbered among the dead. But, seeing her
own state mirrored in her mother's face, Katharine would shake herself
awake with a sense of irritation. Her mother was the last person she
wished to resemble, much though she admired her. Her common sense would
assert itself almost brutally, and Mrs. Hilbery, looking at her with her
odd sidelong glance, that was half malicious and half tender, would liken
her to "your wicked old Uncle Judge Peter, who used to be heard delivering
sentence of death in the bathroom. Thank Heaven, Katharine, I've not a
drop of HIM in me!"</p>
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