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<h2> CHAPTER XVIII </h2>
<p>In the partial reconciliation between Mrs. Mutimer and her children there
was no tenderness on either side. The old conditions could not be
restored, and the habits of the family did not lend themselves to the
polite hypocrisy which lubricates the wheels of the refined world. There
was to be a parting, and probably it would be for life. In Richard’s
household his mother could never have a part, and when Alice married,
doubtless the same social difficulty would present itself. It was not the
future to which Mrs. Mutimer had looked forward, but, having said her say,
she resigned herself and hardened her heart. At least she would die in the
familiar home.</p>
<p>Richard had supper with his sister on his return from Commonwealth Hall,
and their plans were discussed in further detail.</p>
<p>‘I want you,’ he said, ‘to go to the Square with mother to-morrow, and to
stay there till Wednesday. You won’t mind doing that?’</p>
<p>‘I think she’d do every bit as well without me,’ said Alice.</p>
<p>‘Never mind; I should like you to go. I’ll take ‘Arry down to-morrow
morning, then I’ll come and fetch you on Wednesday. You’ll just see that
everything’s comfortable in the house, and buy her a few presents, the
kind of things she’d like.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t suppose she’ll take anything.’</p>
<p>‘Try, at all events. And don’t mind her talk; it does no harm.’</p>
<p>In the morning came the letter from Daniel Dabbs. Richard read it without
any feeling of surprise, still less with indignation, at the calumny of
which it complained. During the night he had wondered uneasily what might
have occurred at the Hoxton meeting, and the result was a revival of his
ignoble anger against Emma. Had he not anxiety enough that she must bring
him new trouble when he believed that all relations between him and her
were at an end? Doubtless she was posing as a martyr before all who knew
anything of her story; why had she refused his money, if not that her case
might seem all the harder? It were difficult to say whether he really
believed this; in a nature essentially egoistic, there is often no line to
be drawn between genuine convictions and the irresponsible charges of
resentment. Mutimer had so persistently trained himself to regard Emma as
in the wrong, that it was no wonder if he had lost the power of judging
sanely in any matter connected with her. Her refusal to benefit by his
generosity had aggravated him; actually, no doubt, because she thus
deprived him of a defence against his conscience.</p>
<p>He was not surprised that libellous rumours were afloat, simply because
since his yesterday’s conversation with Keene the thought of justifying
himself in some such way—should it really prove necessary—had
several times occurred to him, suggested probably by Keene’s own words.
That the journalist had found means of doing him this service was very
likely indeed. He remembered with satisfaction that no hint of such a
thing had escaped his own lips. Still, he was uneasy. Keene might have
fallen short of prudence, with the result that Daniel Dabbs might be in a
position to trace this calumny to him, Mutimer. It would not be pleasant
if the affair, thus represented, came to the ears of his friends,
particularly of Mr. Westlake.</p>
<p>He had just finished his breakfast, and was glancing over the newspaper in
a dull and irritable mood, when Keene himself arrived. Mutimer expected
him. Alice quitted the dining-room when he was announced, and ‘Arry, who
at the same moment came in for breakfast, was bidden go about his
business, and be ready to leave the house in half-an-hour.</p>
<p>‘What does this mean?’ Richard asked abruptly, handing the letter to his
visitor.</p>
<p>Keene perused the crabbed writing, and uttered sundry ‘Ah’s’ and ‘Hum’s.’</p>
<p>‘Do you know anything about it?’ Mutimer continued, in a tone between mere
annoyance and serious indignation.</p>
<p>‘I think I had better tell you what took place last night,’ said the
journalist, with side glances. He had never altogether thrown off the
deferential manner when conversing with his patron, and at present he
emphasised it. ‘Those fellows carry party feeling too far; the proceedings
were scandalous. It really was enough to make one feel that one mustn’t be
too scrupulous in trying to stop their mouths. If I’m not mistaken, an
action for defamation of character would lie against half-a-dozen of
them.’</p>
<p>Mutimer was unfortunately deficient in sense of humour. He continued to
scowl, and merely said: ‘Go on; what happened?’</p>
<p>Mr. Keene allowed the evening’s proceedings to lose nothing in his
narration. He was successful in exciting his hearer to wrath, but, to his
consternation, it was forthwith turned against himself.</p>
<p>‘And you tried to make things better by going about telling what several
of them would know perfectly well to be lies?’ exclaimed Mutimer,
savagely. ‘Who the devil gave you authority to do so?’</p>
<p>‘My dear sir,’ protested the journalist, ‘you have quite mistaken me. I
did not mean to admit that I had told lies. How could I for a moment
suppose that a man of your character would sanction that kind of thing?
Pooh, I hope I know you better! No, no; I merely in the course of
conversation ventured to hint that, as you yourself had explained to me,
there were reasons quite other than the vulgar mind would conceive for—for
the course you had pursued. To my own apprehension such reasons are
abundant, and, I will add, most conclusive. You have not endeavoured to
explain them to me in detail; I trust you felt that I was not so dull of
understanding as to be incapable of—of appreciating motives when
sufficiently indicated. Situations of this kind are <i>never</i> to be
explained grossly; I mean, of course, in the case of men of intellect. I
flatter myself that I have come to know your ruling principles; and I will
say that beyond a doubt your behaviour has been most honourable. Of course
I was mistaken in trying to convey this to those I talked with last night;
they misinterpreted me, and I might have expected it. We cannot give them
the moral feelings which they lack. But I am glad that the error has so
quickly come to light. A mere word from you, and such a delusion goes no
farther. I regret it extremely.’</p>
<p>Mutimer held the letter in his hand, and kept looking from it to the
speaker. Keene’s subtleties were not very intelligible to him, but, even
with a shrewd suspicion that he was being humbugged, he could not resist a
sense of pleasure in hearing himself classed with the superior men whose
actions are not to be explained by the vulgar. Nay, he asked himself
whether the defence was not in fact a just one. After all, was it not
possible that his conduct had been praiseworthy? He recovered the argument
by which he had formerly tried to silence disagreeable inner voices; a man
in his position owed it to society to effect a union of classes, and
private feeling must give way before the higher motive. He reflected for a
moment when Keene ceased to speak.</p>
<p>‘What did you say?’ he then asked, still bluntly, but with less anger.
‘Just tell me the words, as far as you can remember.’</p>
<p>Keene was at no loss to recall inoffensive phrases; in another long
speech, full of cajolery sufficiently artful for the occasion, he
represented himself as having merely protested against misrepresentations
obviously sharpened by malice.</p>
<p>‘It is just possible that I made some reference to her <i>character</i>,’
he admitted, speaking more slowly, and as if desirous that no word should
escape his hearer; ‘but it did not occur to me to guard against
misunderstandings of the word. I might have remembered that it has such
different meanings on the lips of educated and of uneducated men. You, of
course, would never have missed my thoughts.’</p>
<p>‘If I might suggest,’ he added, when Mutimer kept silence, I think, if you
condescend to notice the letter at all, you should reply only in the most
general terms. Who is this man Dabbs, I wonder, who has the impudence to
write to you in this way?’</p>
<p>‘Oh, one of the Hoxton Socialists, I suppose,’ Mutimer answered
carelessly. ‘I remember the name.’</p>
<p>‘A gross impertinence! By no means encourage them in thinking you owe
explanations. Your position doesn’t allow anything of the kind.’</p>
<p>‘All right,’ said Richard, his ill-humour gone; ‘I’ll see to it.’</p>
<p>He was not able, after all, to catch the early train by which he had meant
to take his brother to Wanley. He did not like to leave without some kind
of good-bye to his mother, and Alice said that the old woman would not be
ready to go before eleven o’clock. After half an hour of restlessness he
sat down to answer Daniel’s letter. Keene’s flattery had not been without
its fruit. From anger which had in it an element of apprehension he passed
to an arrogant self-confidence which character and circumstances were
conspiring to make his habitual mood. It <i>was</i> a gross impertinence
in Daniel to address him thus. What was the use of wealth if it did not
exempt one from the petty laws binding on miserable hand to mouth toilers!
He would have done with Emma Vine; his time was of too much value to the
world to be consumed in wranglings about a work-girl. What if here and
there someone believed the calumny? Would it do Emma any harm? That was
most unlikely. On the whole, the misunderstanding was useful; let it take
its course. Men with large aims cannot afford to be scrupulous in small
details. Was not New Wanley a sufficient balance against a piece of
injustice, which, after all, was only one of words?</p>
<p>He wrote:</p>
<p>‘DEAR SIR,—I have received your letter, but it is impossible for me
to spend time in refuting idle stories. What’s more, I cannot see that my
private concerns are a fit subject for discussion at a public meeting, as
I understand they have been made. You are at liberty to read this note
when and where you please, and in that intention let me add that the cause
of Socialism will not be advanced by attacks on the character of those
most earnestly devoted to it. I remain, yours truly,</p>
<p>‘RICHARD MUTIMER.’</p>
<p>It seemed to Richard that this was the very thing, alike in tone and
phrasing. A week or two previously a certain statesman had written to the
same effect in reply to calumnious statements, and Richard consciously
made that letter his model. The statesman had probably been sounder in his
syntax, but his imitator had, no doubt, the advantage in other points.
Richard perused his composition several times, and sent it to the post.</p>
<p>At eleven o’clock Mrs. Mutimer descended to the hall, ready for her
journey. She would not enter any room. Her eldest son came out to meet
her, and got rid of the servant who had fetched a cab.</p>
<p>‘Good-bye for the present, mother,’ he said, giving his hand ‘I hope
you’ll find everything just as you wish it.’</p>
<p>‘If I don’t, I shan’t complain,’ was the cold reply.</p>
<p>The old woman had clad herself, since her retreat, in the garments of
former days; and the truth must be told that they did not add to the
dignity of her appearance. Probably no costume devisable could surpass in
ignoble ugliness the attire of an English working-class widow when she
appears in the streets. The proximity of Alice, always becomingly clad,
drew attention to the poor mother’s plebeian guise. Richard, watching her
enter the cab, felt for the first time a distinct shame. His feelings
might have done him more credit but for the repulse he had suffered.</p>
<p>‘Arry contented himself with standing at the front-room window, his hands
in his pockets.</p>
<p>Later in the same day Daniel Dabbs, who had by chance been following the
British workman’s practice and devoting Monday to recreation, entered an
omnibus in which Mrs. Clay was riding. She had a heavy bundle on her lap,
shopwork which she was taking home. Daniel had already received Mutimer’s
reply, and was nursing a fit of anger. He seated himself by Kate’s side,
and conversed with her.</p>
<p>‘Heard anything from <i>him</i> lately?’ he asked, with a motion of the
head which rendered mention of names unnecessary.</p>
<p>‘Not we,’ Kate replied bitterly, her eyes fixing themselves in scorn.</p>
<p>‘No loss,’ remarked Daniel, with an expression of disgust.</p>
<p>‘He’ll hear from <i>me</i> some day,’ said the woman, ‘and in a way as he
won’t like.’</p>
<p>The noise of the vehicle did not favour conversation. Daniel waited till
Kate got out, then he too descended, and walked along by her side. He did
not offer to relieve her of the bundle in primitive societies woman is
naturally the burden-bearer.</p>
<p>‘I wouldn’t a’ thought it o’ Dick,’ he said, his head thrust forward, and
his eyes turning doggedly from side to side. They say as how too much
money ain’t good for a man, but it’s changed <i>him</i> past all knowin’.’</p>
<p>‘He always had a good deal too much to say for himself,’ remarked Mrs.
Clay, speaking with difficulty through her quickened breath, the bundle
almost more than she could manage.</p>
<p>‘I wish just now as he’d say a bit more,’ said Daniel. ‘Now, see, here’s a
letter I’ve just got from him. I wrote to him last night to let him know
of things as was goin’ round at the lecture. There’s one or two of our
men, you know, think he’d ought to be made to smart a bit for the way he’s
treated Emma, and last night they up an’ spoke—you should just a’
‘eard them. Then someone set it goin’ as the fault wasn’t Dick’s at all.
See what I mean? I don’t know who started that. I can’t think as he’d try
to blacken a girl’s name just to excuse himself; that’s goin’ a bit too
far.’</p>
<p>Mrs. Clay came to a standstill.</p>
<p>‘He’s been saying things of Emma?’ she cried. ‘Is that what you mean?’</p>
<p>‘Well, see now. I couldn’t believe it, an’ I don’t rightly believe it yet.
I’ll read you the answer as he’s sent me.’</p>
<p>Daniel gave forth the letter, getting rather lost amid its pretentious
periods, with the eccentric pauses and intonation of an uneducated reader.
Standing in a busy thoroughfare, he and Kate almost blocked the pavement;
impatient pedestrians pushed against them, and uttered maledictions.</p>
<p>‘I suppose that’s Dick’s new way o’ sayin’ he hadn’t nothin’ to do with
it,’ Daniel commented at the end. ‘Money seems always to bring long words
with it somehow. It seems to me he’d ought to speak plainer.’</p>
<p>‘Who’s done it, if he didn’t?’ Kate exclaimed, with shrill anger. ‘You
don’t suppose there’s another man ‘ud go about telling coward lies? The
mean wretch! Says things about my sister, does he? I’ll be even with that
man yet, never you mind.’</p>
<p>‘Well, I can’t believe it o’ Dick,’ muttered Dabbs. ‘He says ‘ere, you
see, as he hasn’t time to contradict “idle stories.” I suppose that means
he didn’t start ‘em.’</p>
<p>‘If he tells one lie, won’t he tell another?’ cried the woman. She was
obliged to put down her bundle on a doorstep, and used the moment of
relief to pour forth vigorous vituperation. Dick listened with an air half
of approval, half doggedly doubtful. He was not altogether satisfied with
himself.</p>
<p>‘Well, I must get off ‘ome,’ he said at length. ‘It’s only right as you
should know what’s goin’ on. There’s no one believes a word of it, and
that you can tell Emma. If I hear it repeated, you may be sure I’ll up an’
say what I think. It won’t go no further if I can stop it. Well, so long!
Give my respects to your sister.’</p>
<p>Daniel waved his arm and made off across the street. Kate, clutching her
bundle again, panted along by-ways; reaching the house-door she rang a
bell twice, and Emma admitted her. They climbed together to an upper room,
where Kate flung her burden on to the floor and began at once to relate
with vehemence all that Daniel had told her. The calumny lost nothing in
her repetition. After listening in surprise for a few moments, Emma turned
away and quietly began to cut bread and butter for the children, who were
having their tea.</p>
<p>‘Haven’t you got anything to say?’ cried her sister. ‘I suppose he’ll be
telling his foul lies about me next. Oh, he’s a good-’earted man, is
Mutimer! Perhaps you’ll believe me now. Are you going to let him talk what
he likes about you?’</p>
<p>Since the abandonment of the house in Wilton Square, Kate had incessantly
railed in this way; it was a joy to her to have discovered new matter for
invective. Emma’s persistent silence maddened her; even now not a word was
to be got from the girl.</p>
<p>‘Can’t you speak?’ shrilled Mrs. Clay. ‘If you don’t do something, I let
you know that I shall! I’m not going to stand this kind o’ thing, don’t
think it. If they talk ill of you they’ll do the same of me. It’s time
that devil had something for himself. You might be made o’ stone! I only
hope I may meet him in the streets, that’s all! I’ll show him up, see if I
don’t! I’ll let all the people know what he is, the cur! I’ll do something
to make him give me in charge, and then I’ll tell it all out before the
magistrates. I don’t care what comes, I’ll find some way of paying out
that beast!’</p>
<p>Emma turned angrily.</p>
<p>‘Hold your tongue, Kate! If you go on like this day after day we shall
have to part; I can’t put up with it, so there now! I’ve begged and prayed
you to stop, and you don’t pay the least heed to me; I think you might
have more kindness. You’ll never make me say a single word about him, do
what you will; I’ve told you that many a time, and I mean what I say. Let
him say what he likes and do what he likes. It’s nothing to me, and it
doesn’t concern you. You’ll drive me out of the house again, like you did
the other night. I can’t bear it. Do you understand, Kate?—I can’t
bear it!’</p>
<p>Her voice shook, and there were tears of uttermost shame and misery in her
eyes. The children sitting at the table, though accustomed to scenes of
this kind, looked at the disputants with troubled faces, and at length the
younger began to cry. Emma at once turned to the little one with smiles of
re-assurance. Kate would have preferred to deal slaps, but contented
herself with taking a cup of tea to the fireside, and sulking for half an
hour.</p>
<p>Emma unrolled the bundle of work, and soon the hum of the sewing-machine
began, to continue late into the night.</p>
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