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<h2> CHAPTER X </h2>
<p>The declaration of independence so nobly delivered by his brother ‘Arry
necessitated Richard’s stay in town over the following day. The matter was
laid before a family council, held after breakfast in the dining-room.
Richard opened the discussion with some vehemence, and appealed to his
mother and Alice for support. Alice responded heartily; Mrs. Mutimer was
slower in coming to utterance, but at length expressed herself in no
doubtful terms.</p>
<p>‘If he don’t go to his work,’ she said sternly, ‘it’s either him or me’ll
have to leave this house. If he wants to disgrace us all and ruin himself,
he shan’t do it under my eyes.’</p>
<p>Was there ever a harder case? A high-spirited British youth asserts his
intention of living a life of elegant leisure, and is forthwith scouted as
a disgrace to the family. ‘Arry sat under the gross injustice with an air
of doggish defiance.</p>
<p>‘I thought you said I was to go to Wanley?’ he exclaimed at length,
angrily, glaring at his brother.</p>
<p>Richard avoided the look.</p>
<p>‘You’ll have to learn to behave yourself first,’ he replied. ‘If you can’t
be trusted to do your duty here, you’re no good to me at Wanley.’</p>
<p>‘Arry would give neither yes nor no. The council broke up after
formulating an ultimatum.</p>
<p>In the afternoon Richard had another private talk with the lad. This time
he addressed himself solely to ‘Arry’s self-interest, explained to him the
opportunities he would lose if he neglected to make himself a practical
man. What if there was money waiting for him? The use of money was to
breed money, and nowadays no man was rich who didn’t constantly increase
his capital. As a great ironmaster, he would hold a position impossible
for him to attain in any other way; he would employ hundreds, perhaps
thousands, of men; society would recognise him. What could he expect to be
if he did nothing but loaf about the streets?</p>
<p>This was going the right way to work. Richard found that he was making an
impression, and gradually fell into a kinder tone, so that in the end he
brought ‘Arry to moderately cheerful acquiescence.</p>
<p>‘And don’t let men like that Keene make a fool of you,’ the monitor
concluded. ‘Can’t you see that fellows like him’ll hang on and make their
profit out of you if you know no better than to let them? You just keep to
yourself, and look after your own future.’</p>
<p>A suggestion that cunning was required of him flattered the youth to some
purpose. He had begun to reflect that after all it might be more
profitable to combine work and pleasure. He agreed to pursue the course
planned for him.</p>
<p>So Richard returned to Wanley, carrying with him a small satisfaction and
many great anxieties. Nor did he visit London again until four weeks had
gone by; it was understood that the pressure of responsibilities grew
daily more severe. New Wanley, as the industrial settlement in the valley
was to be named, was shaping itself in accordance with the ideas of the
committee with which Mutimer took counsel, and the undertaking was no
small one.</p>
<p>In spite of Emma’s cheerful anticipations, ‘the business’ meanwhile made
little progress. A graver trouble was the state of Jane’s health; the
sufferer seemed wasting away. Emma devoted herself to her sister. Between
her and Mutimer there was no further mention of marriage. In Emma’s mind a
new term had fixed itself—that of her sister’s recovery; but there
were dark moments when dread came to her that not Jane’s recovery, but
something else, would set her free. In the early autumn Richard persuaded
her to take the invalid to the sea-side, and to remain with her there for
three weeks. Mrs. Clay during that time lived alone, and was very content
to receive her future brother-in-law’s subsidy, without troubling about
the work which would not come in.</p>
<p>Autumn had always been a peaceful and bounteous season at Wanley; then the
fruit trees bent beneath their golden charge, and the air seemed rich with
sweet odours. But the autumn of this year was unlike any that had visited
the valley hitherto. Blight had fallen upon all produce; the crop of
apples and plums was bare beyond precedent. The west wind breathing up
between the hill-sides only brought smoke from newly-built chimneys; the
face of the fields was already losing its purity and taking on a dun hue.
Where a large orchard had flourished were two streets of small houses,
glaring with new brick and slate The works were extending by degrees, and
a little apart rose the walls of a large building which would contain
library, reading rooms, and lecture-hall, for the use of the industrial
community. New Wanley was in a fair way to claim for itself a place on the
map.</p>
<p>The Manor was long since furnished, and Richard entertained visitors. He
had provided himself with a housekeeper, as well as the three or four
necessary servants, and kept a saddle-horse as well as that which drew his
trap to and fro when he had occasion to go to Agworth station. His
establishment was still a modest one; all things considered, it could not
be deemed inconsistent with his professions. Of course, stories to the
contrary got about; among his old comrades in London, thoroughgoing
Socialists like Messrs. Cowes and Cullen, who perhaps thought themselves a
little neglected by the great light of the Union, there passed
occasionally nods and winks, which were meant to imply much. There were
rumours of banqueting which went on at Wanley; the Manor was spoken of by
some who had not seen it as little less than a palace—nay, it was
declared by one or two of the shrewder tongued that a manservant in livery
opened the door, a monstrous thing if true. Worse than this was the talk
which began to spread among the Hoxton and Islington Unionists of a
certain young woman in a poor position to whom Mutimer had in former days
engaged himself, and whom he did not now find it convenient to marry. A
few staunch friends Richard had, who made it their business stoutly to
contradict the calumnies which came within their hearing, Daniel Dabbs the
first of them. But even Daniel found himself before long preferring
silence to speech on the subject of Emma Vine. He grew uncomfortable about
it, and did not know what to think.</p>
<p>The first of Richard’s visitors at the Manor were Mr. and Mrs. Westlake.
They came down from London one day, and stayed over till the next. Other
prominent members of the Union followed, and before the end of the autumn
Richard entertained some dozen of the rank and file, all together, paying
their railway fares and housing them from Saturday to Monday. These men,
be it noted in passing, distinguished themselves from that day onwards by
unsparing detraction whenever the name of Mutimer came up in private talk,
though, of course, they were the loudest in applause when platform
reference to their leader demanded it. Besides the expressly invited,
there was naturally no lack of visitors who presented themselves
voluntarily. Among the earliest of these was Mr. Keene, the journalist. He
sent in his name one Sunday morning requesting an interview on a matter of
business, and on being admitted, produced a copy of the ‘Belwick
Chronicle,’ which contained a highly eulogistic semi-biographic notice of
Mutimer.</p>
<p>‘I feel I ought to apologise to you for this liberty,’ said Keene, in his
flowing way, ‘and that is why I have brought the paper myself. You will
observe that it is one of a seris—notable men of the day. I supply
the “Chronicle” with a London letter, and give them one of these little
sketches fortnightly. I knew your modesty would stand in the way if I
consulted you in advance, so I can only beg pardon <i>post delictum</i>,
as we say.’</p>
<p>There stood the heading in bold type, ‘MEN OF THE DAY,’ and beneath it
‘XI. Mr. Richard Mutimer.’ Mr. Keene had likewise brought in his pocket
the placard of the newspaper, whereon Richard saw his name prominently
displayed. The journalist stayed for luncheon.</p>
<p>Alfred Waltham was frequently at the Manor. Mutimer now seldom went up to
town for Sunday; if necessity took him thither, he chose some week-day. On
Sunday he always spent a longer or shorter time with the Walthams,
frequently having dinner at their house. He hesitated at first to invite
the ladies to the Manor; in his uncertainty on social usages he feared
lest there might be impropriety in a bachelor giving such an invitation.
He appealed to Alfred, who naturally laughed the scruple to scorn, and
accordingly Mrs. and Miss Waltham were begged to honour Mr. Mutimer with
their company. Mrs. Waltham reflected a little, but accepted. Adela would
much rather have remained at home, but she had no choice.</p>
<p>By the end of September this invitation had been repeated, and the
Walthams had lunched a second time at the Manor, no other guests being
present. On the afternoon of the following day Mrs. Waltham and her
daughter were talking together in their sitting-room, and the former led
the conversation, as of late she almost invariably did when alone with her
daughter, to their revolutionary friend.</p>
<p>‘I can’t help thinking, Adela, that in all essentials I never knew a more
gentlemanly man than Mr. Mutimer. There must be something superior in his
family; no doubt we were altogether mistaken in speaking of him as a
mechanic.’</p>
<p>‘But he has told us himself that he was a mechanic,’ replied Adela, in the
impatient way in which she was wont to speak on this subject.</p>
<p>‘Oh, that is his modesty. And not only modesty; his views lead him to
pride himself on a poor origin. He was an engineer, and we know that
engineers are in reality professional men. Remember old Mr. Mutimer; he
was a perfect gentleman. I have no doubt the family is really a very good
one. Indeed, I am all but sure that I remember the name in Hampshire;
there was a Sir something Mutimer—I’m convinced of it. No one really
belonging to the working class ever bore himself as Mr. Mutimer does.
Haven’t you noticed the shape of his hands, my dear?’</p>
<p>‘I’ve only noticed that they are very large, and just what you would
expect in a man who had done much rough work.’</p>
<p>Mrs. Waltham laughed noisily.</p>
<p>‘My dear child, how <i>can</i> you be so perverse? The shape of the
fingers is perfect. Do pray notice them next time.’</p>
<p>‘I really cannot promise, mother, to give special attention to Mr.
Mutimer’s hands.’</p>
<p>Mrs. Waltham glanced at the girl, who had laid down a book she was trying
to read, and, with lowered eyes, seemed to be collecting herself for
further utterance.</p>
<p>‘Why are you so prejudiced, Adela?’</p>
<p>‘I am not prejudiced at all. I have no interest of any kind in Mr.
Mutimer.’</p>
<p>The words were spoken hurriedly and with a ring almost of hostility. At
the same time the girl’s cheeks flushed. She felt herself hard beset. A
network was being woven about her by hands she could not deem other than
loving; it was time to exert herself that the meshes might not be
completed, and the necessity cost her a feeling of shame.</p>
<p>‘But your brother’s friend, my dear. Surely you ought not to say that you
have no interest in him at all.’</p>
<p>‘I do say it, mother, and I wish to say it so plainly that you cannot
after this mistake me. Alfred’s friends are very far from being
necessarily my friends. Not only have I no interest in Mr. Mutimer, I even
a little dislike him.’</p>
<p>‘I had no idea of that, Adela,’ said her mother, rather blankly.</p>
<p>‘But it is the truth, and I feel I ought to have tried to make you
understand that sooner. I thought you would see that I had no pleasure in
speaking of him.’</p>
<p>‘But how is it possible to dislike him? I confess that is very hard for me
to understand. I am sure his behaviour to you is perfect—so entirely
respectful, so gentlemanly.’</p>
<p>‘No, mother, that is not quite the word to use. You are mistaken; Mr.
Mutimer is <i>not</i> a perfect gentleman.’</p>
<p>It was said with much decision, for to Adela’s mind this clenched her
argument. Granted the absence of certain qualities which she held
essential in a gentleman, there seemed to her no reason for another word
on the subject.</p>
<p>‘Pray, when has he misbehaved himself?’ inquired her mother, with a touch
of pique.</p>
<p>‘I cannot go into details. Mr. Mutimer has no doubt many excellent
qualities; no doubt he is really an earnest and a well-meaning man. But if
I am asked to say more than that, it must be the truth—as it seems
to me. Please, mother dear, don’t ask me to talk about him in future. And
there is something else I wish to say. I do hope you won’t be offended
with me, but indeed I—I hope you will not ask me to go to the Manor
again. I feel I ought not to go. It is painful; I suffer when I am there.’</p>
<p>‘How strange you are to-day, Adela! Really, I think you might allow me to
decide what is proper and what is not. My experience is surely the best
judge. You are worse than unkind, Adela; it’s rude to speak to me like
that.’</p>
<p>‘Dear mother,’ said the girl, with infinite gentleness, ‘I am very, very
sorry. How could I be unkind or rude to you? I didn’t for a moment mean
that my judgment was better than yours; it is my feelings that I speak of.
You won’t ask me to explain—to say more than that? You must
understand me?’</p>
<p>‘Oh yes, my dear, I understand you too well,’ was the stiff reply. ‘Of
course I am old-fashioned, and I suppose old-fashioned people are a little
coarse; <i>their</i> feelings are not quite as fine as they might be. We
will say no more for the present, Adela. I will do my best not to lead you
into disagreeable situations through my lack of delicacy.’</p>
<p>There were tears in Adela’s eyes.</p>
<p>‘Mother, now it is you who are unkind. I am so sorry that I spoke. You
won’t take my words as they were meant. Must I say that I cannot let Mr.
Mutimer misunderstand the way in which. I regard him? He comes here really
so very often, and if we begin to go there too—. People are talking
about it, indeed they are; Letty has told me so. How can I help feeling
pained?’</p>
<p>Mrs. Waltham drew out her handkerchief and appeared mildly agitated. When
Adela bent and kissed her she sighed deeply, then said in an undertone of
gentle melancholy:</p>
<p>‘I ask your pardon, my dear. I am afraid there has been a little
misunderstanding on both sides. But we won’t talk any more of it—there,
there!’</p>
<p>By which the good lady of course meant that she would renew the subject on
the very earliest opportunity, and that, on the whole, she was not
discouraged. Mothers are often unaware of their daughters’ strong points,
but their weaknesses they may be trusted to understand pretty well.</p>
<p>The little scene was just well over, and Adela had taken a seat by the
window, when a gentleman who was approaching the front door saw her and
raised his hat. She went very pale.</p>
<p>The next moment there was a knock at the front door.</p>
<p>‘Mother,’ the girl whispered, as if she could not speak louder, ‘it is Mr.
Eldon.’</p>
<p>‘Mr. Eldon?’ Mrs. Waltham drew herself up with dignity, then started from
her seat. ‘The idea of his daring to come here!’</p>
<p>She intercepted the servant who was going to open the door.</p>
<p>‘Jane, we are not at home!’</p>
<p>The maid stood in astonishment. She was not used to the polite fictions of
society; never before had that welcome mortal, an afternoon visitor, been
refused at Mrs. Waltham’s.</p>
<p>‘What did you say, please, mum?’</p>
<p>‘You will say that we are not at home, neither I nor Miss Waltham.’</p>
<p>Even if Hubert Eldon had not seen Adela at the window he must have been
dull not to read the meaning of the servant’s singular face and tone. He
walked away with a quiet ‘Thank you.’</p>
<p>Mrs. Waltham cast a side glance at Adela when she heard the outer door
close. The girl had reopened her book.</p>
<p>‘I’m not sorry that he came. Was there ever such astonishing impudence? If
<i>that</i> is gentlemanly, then I must confess I—Really I am not at
all sorry he came: it will give him a lesson.’</p>
<p>‘Mr. Eldon may have had some special reason for calling,’ Adela remarked
disinterestedly.</p>
<p>‘My dear, I have no business of any kind with Mr. Eldon, and it is
impossible that he can have any with me.’</p>
<p>Adela very shortly went from the room.</p>
<p>That evening Richard had for guest at dinner Mr. Willis Rodman; so that
gentleman named himself on his cards, and so he liked to be announced. Mr.
Rodman was invaluable as surveyor of the works; his experience appeared
boundless, and had been acquired in many lands. He was now a Socialist of
the purest water, and already he enjoyed more of Mutimer’s intimacy than
anyone else. Richard not seldom envied the easy and, as it seemed to him,
polished manner of his subordinate, and wondered at it the more since
Rodman declared himself a proletarian by birth, and, in private, was fond
of referring to the hardships of his early life. That there may be no
needless mystery about Mr. Rodman, I am under the necessity of stating the
fact that he was the son of a prosperous railway contractor, that he was
born in Canada, and would have succeeded to a fortune on his father’s
death, but for an unhappy <i>contretemps</i> in the shape of a cheque,
whereof Mr. Rodman senior (the name was not Rodman, but the true one is of
no importance) disclaimed the signature. From that day to the present good
and ill luck had alternated in the young man’s career. His fortunes in
detail do not concern us just now; there will be future occasion for
returning to the subject.</p>
<p>‘Young Eldon has been in Wanley to-day,’ Mr. Rodman remarked as he sat
over his wine after dinner.</p>
<p>‘Has he?’ said Richard, with indifference. ‘What’s he been after?’</p>
<p>‘I saw him going up towards the Walthams’.’</p>
<p>Richard exhibited more interest.</p>
<p>‘Is he a particular friend of theirs?’ he asked. He had gathered from
Alfred Waltham that there had been a certain intimacy between the ‘two
families, but desired more detailed information than his disciple had
offered.</p>
<p>‘Well, he used to be,’ replied Rodman, with a significant smile. ‘But I
don’t suppose Mrs. W. gave him a very affectionate reception to-day. His
little doings have rather startled the good people of Wanley, especially
since he has lost his standing. It wouldn’t have mattered much, I dare
say, but for that.’</p>
<p>‘But was there anything particular up there?’</p>
<p>Mutimer had a careworn expression as he asked, and he nodded his head as
if in the direction of the village with a certain weariness.</p>
<p>‘I’m not quite sure. Some say there was, and others deny it, as I gather
from general conversation. But I suppose it’s at an end now, in any case.’</p>
<p>‘Mrs. Waltham would see to that, you mean?’ said Mutimer, with a short
laugh.</p>
<p>‘Probably.’</p>
<p>Rodman made his glass revolve, his fingers on the stem.</p>
<p>‘Take another cigar. I suppose they’re not too well off, the Walthams?’</p>
<p>‘Mrs. Waltham has an annuity of two hundred and fifty pounds, that’s all.
The girl—Miss Waltham—has nothing.’</p>
<p>‘How the deuce do you get to know so much about people, Rodman?’</p>
<p>The other smiled modestly, and made a silent gesture, as if to disclaim
any special abilities.</p>
<p>‘So he called there to-day? I wonder whether he stayed long?’</p>
<p>‘I will let you know to-morrow.’</p>
<p>On the morrow Richard learnt that Hubert Eldon had been refused
admittance. The information gave him pleasure. Yet all through the night
he had been earnestly hoping that he might hear something quite different,
had tried to see in Eldon’s visit a possible salvation for himself. For
the struggle which occupied him more and more had by this time declared
its issues plainly enough; daily the temptation became stronger, the
resources of honour more feeble. In the beginning he had only played with
dangerous thoughts; to break faith with Emma Vine had appeared an
impossibility, and a marriage such as his fancy substituted, the most
improbable of things. But in men of Richard’s stamp that which allures the
fancy will, if circumstances give but a little encouragement, soon take
hold upon the planning brain. His acquaintance with the Walthams had
ripened to intimacy, and custom nourished his self-confidence; moreover,
he could not misunderstand the all but direct encouragement which on one
or two recent occasions he had received from Mrs. Waltham. That lady had
begun to talk to him, when they were alone together, in almost a motherly
way, confiding to him this or that peculiarity in the characters of her
children, deploring her inability to give Adela the pleasures suitable to
her age, then again pointing out the advantage it was to a girl to have
all her thoughts centred in home.</p>
<p>‘I can truly say,’ remarked Mrs. Waltham in the course of the latest such
conversation, ‘that Adela has never given me an hour’s serious uneasiness.
The dear child has, I believe, no will apart from her desire to please me.
Her instincts are so beautifully submissive.’</p>
<p>To a man situated like Mutimer this tone is fatal. In truth it seemed to
make offer to him of what he supremely desired. No such encouragement had
come from Adela herself, but that meant nothing either way; Richard had
already perceived that maidenly reserve was a far more complex matter in a
girl of gentle breeding, than in those with whom he had formerly
associated; for all he knew, increase of distance in manner might
represent the very hope that he was seeking. That hope he sought, in all
save the hours when conscience lorded over silence, with a reality of
desire such as he had never known. Perhaps it was not Adela, and Adela
alone, that inspired this passion; it was a new ideal of the feminine
addressing itself to his instincts. Adela had the field to herself, and
did indeed embody in almost an ideal degree the fine essence of distinctly
feminine qualities which appeal most strongly to the masculine mind.
Mutimer was not capable of love in the highest sense; he was not, again,
endowed with strong appetite; but his nature contained possibilities of
refinement which, in a situation like the present, constituted motive
force the same in its effects as either form of passion. He was suffering,
too, from the <i>malaise</i> peculiar to men who suddenly acquire riches;
secret impulses drove him to gratifications which would not otherwise have
troubled his thoughts. Of late he had been yielding to several such
caprices. One morning the idea possessed him that he must have a horse for
riding, and he could not rest till the horse was purchased and in his
stable. It occurred to him once at dinner time that there were sundry
delicacies which he knew by name but had never tasted; forthwith he gave
orders that these delicacies should be supplied to him, and so there
appeared upon his breakfast table a <i>pate de foie gras</i>. Very similar
in kind was his desire to possess Adela Waltham.</p>
<p>And the voice of his conscience lost potency, though it troubled him more
than ever, even as a beggar will sometimes become rudely clamorous when he
sees that there is no real hope of extracting an alms. Richard was
embarked on the practical study of moral philosophy; he learned more in
these months of the constitution of his inner being than all his
literature of ‘free thought’ had been able to convey to him. To break with
Emma, to cast his faith to the winds, to be branded henceforth in the
sight of his intimate friends as a mere traitor, and an especially mean
one to boot—that at the first blush was of the things so impossible
that one does not trouble to study their bearings. But the wall of habit
once breached, the citadel of conscience laid bare, what garrison was
revealed? With something like astonishment, Richard came to recognise that
the garrison was of the most contemptible and tatterdemalion description.
Fear of people’s talk—absolutely nothing else stood in his way.</p>
<p>Had he, then, no affection for Emma? Hardly a scrap. He had never even
tried ‘to persuade himself that he was in love with her, and the
engagement had on his side been an affair of cool reason. His mother had
practically brought it about; for years it had been a pet project of hers,
and her joy was great in its realisation. Mrs. Vine and she had been
lifelong gossips; she knew that to Emma had descended the larger portion
of her parent’s sterling qualities, and that Emma was the one wife for
such a man as Richard. She talked him into approval. In those days Richard
had no dream of wedding above his class, and he understood very well that
Emma Vine was distinguished in many ways from the crowd of working girls.
There was no one else he wished to marry. Emma would feel herself honoured
by his choice, and, what he had not himself observed, his mother led him
to see that yet deeper feelings were concerned on the girl’s side. This
flattered him—a form of emotion to which he was ever susceptible—and
the match was speedily arranged.</p>
<p>He had never repented. The more he knew of Emma, the more confirmation his
favourable judgments received. He even knew at times a stirring of the
senses, which is the farthest that many of his kind ever progress in the
direction of love. Of the nobler features in Emma’s character, he of
course remained ignorant; they did not enter into his demands upon woman,
and he was unable to discern them even when they were brought prominently
before him. She would keep his house admirably, would never contradict
him, would mother his children to perfection, and even would, go so far as
to take an intelligent interest in the Propaganda. What more could a man
look for?</p>
<p>So there was no strife between old love and new; so far as it concerned
himself, to put Emma aside would not cost a pang. The garrison was
absolutely mere tongue, mere gossip of public-house bars, firesides, etc.—more
serious, of the Socialist lecture-rooms. And what of the girl’s own
feeling? Was there no sense of compassion in him? Very little. And in
saying so I mean anything but to convey that Mutimer was conspicuously
hard-hearted. The fatal defect in working people is absence of
imagination, the power which may be solely a gift of nature and
irrespective of circumstances, but which in most of us owes so much to
intellectual training. Half the brutal cruelties perpetrated by uneducated
men and women are directly traceable to lack of the imaginative spirit,
which comes to mean lack of kindly sympathy. Mutimer, we know, had got for
himself only the most profitless of educations, and in addition nature had
scanted him on the emotional side. He could not enter into the position of
Emma deserted and hopeless. Want of money was intelligible to him, so was
bitter disappointment at the loss of a good position; but the former he
would not allow Emma to suffer, and the latter she would, in the nature of
things, soon get over. Her love for him he judged by his own feeling,
making allowance, of course, for the weakness of women in affairs such as
this. He might admit that she would ‘fret,’ but the thought of her
fretting did not affect him as a reality. Emma had never been
demonstrative, had never sought to show him all that was in her heart;
hence he rated her devotion lightly.</p>
<p>The opinion of those who knew him! What of the opinion of Emma herself?
Yes, that went for much; he knew shame at the thought, perhaps keener
shame than in anticipating the judgment, say, of Daniel Dabbs. No one of
his acquaintances thought of him so highly as Emma did; to see himself
dethroned, the object of her contempt, was a bitter pill to swallow. In
all that concerned his own dignity Richard was keenly appreciative; he
felt in advance every pricking of the blood that was in store for him if
he became guilty of this treachery. Yes, from that point of view he feared
Emma Vine.</p>
<p>Considerations of larger scope did not come within the purview of his
intellect. It never occurred to him, for instance, that in forfeiting his
honour in this instance he began a process of undermining which would
sooner or later threaten the stability of the purposes on which he most
prided himself. A suggestion that domestic perfidy was in the end
incompatible with public zeal would have seemed to him ridiculous, and for
the simple reason that he recognised no ‘moral sanctions. He could not
regard his nature as a whole; he had no understanding for the subtle
network of communication between its various parts. Nay, he told himself
that the genuineness and value of his life’s work would be increased by a
marriage with Adela Waltham; he and she would represent the union of
classes—of the wage-earning with the <i>bourgeois</i>, between which
two lay the real gist of the combat. He thought of this frequently, and
allowed the thought to inspirit him.</p>
<p>To the question of whether Adela would ever find out what he had done,
and, if so, with what result, he gave scarcely a moment. Marriages are not
undone by subsequent discovery of moral faults on either side.</p>
<p>This is a tabular exposition of the man’s consciousness. Logically, there
should result from it a self-possessed state of mind, bordering on
cynicism. But logic was not predominant in Mutimer’s constitution. So far
from contemplating treason with the calm intelligence which demands
judgment on other grounds than the common, he was in reality possessed by
a spirit of perturbation. Such reason as he could command bade him look up
and view with scorn the ragged defenders of the forts; but whence came
this hail of missiles which kept him so sore? Clearly there was some
element of his nature which eluded grasp and definition, a misty influence
making itself felt here and there. To none of the sources upon which I
have touched was it clearly traceable; in truth, it arose from them all.
The man had never in his life been guilty of offence against his graver
conscience; he had the sensation of being about to plunge from firm
footing into untried depths. His days were troubled; his appetite was not
what it should have been; he could not take the old thorough interest in
his work. It was becoming clear to him that the matter must be settled one
way or another with brief delay.</p>
<p>One day at the end of September he received a letter addressed by Alice.
On opening it he found, with much surprise, that the contents were in his
mother’s writing. It was so very rarely that Mrs. Mutimer took up that
dangerous instrument, the pen, that something unusual must have led to her
doing so at present. And, indeed, the letter contained unexpected matter.
There were numerous errors of orthography, and the hand was not very
legible; but Richard got at the sense quickly enough.</p>
<p>‘I write this,’ began Mrs. Mutimer, ‘because it’s a long time since you’ve
been to see us, and because I want to say something that’s better written
than spoken. I saw Emma last night, and I’m feeling uncomfortable about
her. She’s getting very low, and that’s the truth. Not as she says
anything, nor shows it, but she’s got a deal on her hands, and more on her
mind. You haven’t written to her for three weeks. You’ll be saying it’s no
business of mine, but I can’t stand by and see Emma putting up with things
as there isn’t no reason. Jane is in a very bad way, poor girl; I can’t
think she’ll live long. Now, Dick, what I’m aiming at you’ll see. I can’t
understand why you don’t get married and done with it. Jane won’t never be
able to work again, and that Kate ‘ll never keep up a dressmaking. Why
don’t you marry Emma, and take poor Jane to live with you, where she could
be well looked after? for she won’t never part from her sister. And she
does so hope and pray to see Emma married before she goes. You can’t
surely be waiting for her death. Now, there’s a good lad of mine, come and
marry your wife at once, and don’t make delays. That’s all, but I hope
you’ll think of it; and so, from your affectionate old mother,</p>
<p>‘S. MUTIMER.’</p>
<p>Richard read the letter several times, and sat at home through the morning
in despondency. It had got to the pass that he could not marry Emma; for
all his suffering he no longer gave a glance in that direction. Not even
if Adela Waltham refused him; to have a ‘lady’ for his wife was now an
essential in his plans for the future, and he knew that the desired
possession was purchasable for coin of the realm. No way of retreat any
longer; movement must be forward, at whatever cost.</p>
<p>He let a day intervene, then replied to his mother’s letter. He
represented himself as worked to death and without a moment for his
private concerns; it was out of the question for him to marry for a few
weeks yet. He would write to Emma, and would send her all the money she
could possibly need to supply the sick girl with comforts. She must keep
up her courage, and be content to wait a short while longer. He was quite
sure she did not complain; it was only his mother’s fancy that she was in
low spirits, except, of course, on Jane’s account.</p>
<p>Another fortnight went by. Skies were lowering towards winter, and the
sides of the valley showed bare patches amid the rich-hued death of
leaves; ere long a night of storm would leave ‘ruined choirs.’ Richard was
in truth working hard. He had just opened a course of lectures at a newly
established Socialist branch in Belwick. The extent of his daily
correspondence threatened to demand the services of a secretary in
addition to the help already given by Rodman. Moreover, an event of
importance was within view; the New Wanley Public Hall was completed, and
its formal opening must be made an occasion of ceremony. In that ceremony
Richard would be the central figure. He proposed to gather about him a
representative company; not only would the Socialist leaders attend as a
matter of course, invitations should also be sent to prominent men in the
conventional lines of politics. A speech from a certain Radical statesman,
who could probably be induced to attend, would command the attention of
the press. For the sake of preliminary trumpetings in even so humble a
journal as the ‘Belwick Chronicle,’ Mutimer put himself in communication
with Mr. Keene. That gentleman was now a recognised visitor at the house
in Highbury; there was frequent mention of him in a close correspondence
kept up between Richard and his sister at this time. The letters which
Alice received from Wanley were not imparted to the other members of the
family; she herself studied them attentively, and with much apparent
satisfaction.</p>
<p>For advice on certain details of the approaching celebration Richard had
recourse to Mrs. Waltham. He found her at home one rainy morning. Adela,
aware of his arrival, retreated to her little room upstairs. Mrs. Waltham
had a slight cold; it kept her close by the fireside, and encouraged
confidential talk.</p>
<p>‘I have decided to invite about twenty people to lunch,’ Richard said.
‘Just the members of the committee and a few others. It’ll be better than
giving a dinner. Westlake’s lecture will be over by four o’clock, and that
allows people to get away in good time. The workmen’s tea will be at
half-past five.’</p>
<p>‘You must have refreshments of some kind for casual comers,’ counselled
Mrs. Waltham.</p>
<p>‘I’ve thought of that. Rodman suggests that we shall get the “Wheatsheaf”
people to have joints and that kind of thing in the refreshment-room at
the Hall from half-past twelve to half-past one. We could put up some
notice to that effect in Agworth station.’</p>
<p>‘Certainly, and inside the railway carriages.’</p>
<p>Mutimer’s private line, which ran from the works to Agworth station, was
to convey visitors to New Wanley on this occasion.</p>
<p>‘I think I shall have three or four ladies,’ Richard pursued ‘Mrs.
Westlake ‘ll be sure to come’, and I think Mrs. Eddlestone—the wife
of the Trades Union man, you know. And I’ve been rather calculating on
you, Mrs. Waltham; do you think you could—?’</p>
<p>The lady’s eyes were turned to the window, watching the sad steady rain.</p>
<p>‘Really, you’re making a downright Socialist of me, Mr. Mutimer,’ she
replied, with a laugh which betrayed a touch of sore throat. ‘I’m half
afraid to accept such an invitation. Shouldn’t I be there on false
pretences, don’t you think?’</p>
<p>Richard mused; his legs were crossed, and he swayed his foot up and down.</p>
<p>‘Well, no, I can’t see that. But I tell you what would make it simpler: do
you think Mr. Wyvern would come if I, asked him?’</p>
<p>‘Ah, now, that would be capital! Oh, ask Mr. Wyvern by all means. Then, of
course, I should be delighted to accept.’</p>
<p>‘But I haven’t much hope that he’ll come. I rather think he regards me as
his enemy. And, you see, I never go to church.’</p>
<p>‘What a pity that is, Mr. Mutimer! Ah, if I could only persuade you to
think differently about those things! There really are so many texts that
read quite like Socialism; I was looking them over with Adela on Sunday.
What a sad thing it is that you go so astray t It distresses me more than
you think. Indeed, if I may tell you such a thing, I pray for you
nightly.’</p>
<p>Mutimer made a movement of discomfort, but laughed off the subject.</p>
<p>‘I’ll go and see the vicar, at all events,’ he said. ‘But must your coming
depend on his?’</p>
<p>Mrs. Waltham hesitated.</p>
<p>‘It really would make things easier.’</p>
<p>‘Might I, in that case, hope that Miss Waltham would come?’</p>
<p>Richard seemed to exert himself to ask the question. Mrs. Waltham sank her
eyes, smiled feebly, and in the end shook her head.</p>
<p>‘On a public occasion, I’m really afraid—’</p>
<p>‘I’m sure she would like to know Mrs. Westlake,’ urged Richard, without
his usual confidence. ‘And if you and her brother—’</p>
<p>‘If it were not a Socialist gathering.’</p>
<p>Richard uncrossed his legs and sat for a moment looking into the fire.
Then he turned suddenly.</p>
<p>‘Mrs. Waltham, may I ask her myself?’</p>
<p>She was visibly agitated. There was this time no affectation in the
tremulous lips and the troublous, unsteady eyes. Mrs. Waltham was not by
nature the scheming mother who is indifferent to the upshot if she can
once get her daughter loyally bound to a man of money. Adela’s happiness
was a very real care to her; she would never have opposed an
unobjectionable union on which she found her daughter’s heart bent, but
circumstances had a second time made offer of brilliant advantages, and
she had grown to deem it an ordinance of the higher powers that Adela
should marry possessions. She flattered herself that her study of
Mutimer’s character had been profound; the necessity of making such a
study excused, she thought, any little excess of familiarity in which she
had indulged, for it had long been clear to her that Mutimer would some
day make an offer. He lacked polish, it was true, but really he was more a
gentleman than a great many whose right to the name was never contested.
And then he had distinctly high aims: such a man could never be brutal in
the privacy of his home. There was every chance of his achieving some kind
of eminence; already she had suggested to him a Parliamentary career, and
the idea had not seemed altogether distasteful. Adela herself was as yet
far from regarding Mutimer in the light of a future husband; it was
perhaps true that she even disliked him. But then a young girl’s likes and
dislikes have, as a rule, small bearing on her practical content in the
married state; so, at least, Mrs. Waltham’s experience led her to believe.
Only, it was clear that there must be no precipitancy. Let the ground be
thoroughly prepared.</p>
<p>‘May I advise you, Mr. Mutimer?’ she said, in a lowered voice, bending
forward. ‘Let me deliver the invitation. I think it would be better,
really. We shall see whether you can persuade Mr. Wyvern to be present. I
promise you to—in fact, not to interpose any obstacle if Adela
thinks she can be present at the lunch.’</p>
<p>‘Then I’ll leave it so,’ said Richard, more cheerfully. Mrs. Waltham could
see that his nerves were in a dancing state. Really, he had much fine
feeling.</p>
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