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                    THE UNVEXED ISLES

ТИХИЕ ОСТРОВА / Сборник рассказов на английском языке для студентов V курса педагогических институтов Обработка текста и комментарий И. В. Ступникова Рекомендовано к изданию Министерством просвещения СССР Ленинград «Просвещение» Ленинградское отделение 1976
4П(Лнгл) С 88 Ступников И. В. г С 88 . Тихие острова. Сборник рассказов па англ. яз. для студентов V курса пед. ин-тов. Обраб. текстам п коммент. И. В. Ступникова. Л., «Просвещение», 1976. 176 с. о пл, , Пособие представляет собой сборник рассказов английских . л американских писателей с начала века до нашего времени (Р. Ларднер, Р. П. Уоррен, Т. Уильямс и др.). Рассказы инте- ресны по фабуле, занимательны, отличаются социальной на- правленностью. За каждым рассказом следует ряд вопросов-за- даний. Цель их — более глубокое проникновение в социальный смысл произведения. m 60602—063 ' ЮЗ (03)-76' 17 77 4П(Лпгл) © Издательство «Просвещение», 1976 г,
Ring Wt Lardnqv _ OLD FOLKS* CHRISTMAS Tom and Grace Carter sat in their living-room oh Christmas Eve, sometimes talking, sometimes pretend- ing to read and all the time thinking things they didn’t want to think. Their two children, Junior, aged nineteen, and Grace, two years younger, had come home that day from their schools for the Christmas vacation. Junior was in his first year at the university and Grace, attending a boarding-school that would fit her for college. I won’t call them Grace and Junior any more, though that is the way they had been christened.. Junior had changed his name to Ted and Grace was now Caroline, and thus they insisted on being addressed, even by their parents. This was one of the things Tom and Grace 1* 3
the elder were thinking of as they sat in their living- room Christmas Eve. Other university freshmen who had lived here had returned on the twenty-first, the day when the vacation was supposed to begin. Ted had telegraphed that he would be three days late owing to a special examination which, if he passed it, would lighten the terrific burden of the next term. He had arrived at home looking so pale, heavy-eyed and shaky that his mother doubted the wisdom of the concentrated mental effort, while his father secretly hoped the stuff had been non-poison- ous and would not have lasting effects. Caroline, too, had been behind schedule, explaining that her laundry had gone astray and she had not dared trust others to trace it for her. Grace and Tom had attempted, with fair success, to conceal their disappointment over this delayed home- coming and had continued with their preparations for a Christmas that would thrill their children and conse- quently themselves. They had bought an imposing lot of presents, costing twice or three times as much as' had been Tom’s father’s annual income when Tom was Ted’s age, or Tom’s own income a year ago, before Gener- al Motors’ acceptance of his new weather-proof paint had enabled him to buy this suburban home and luxuries such as his own parents and Grace’s had never dreamed of, and to give Ted and Caroline advantages that he and Grace had perforce gone without. Behind the closed door of the music-room was the elaborately decked tree. The piano and piano bench and the floor around the tree were covered with berib- boned packages of all sizes, shapes and weights, one of them addressed to Tom, another to Grace, a few to the servants and the rest to Ted and Caroline. A huge box contained a sealskin coat for Caroline, a coat that had cost as much as the Carters had formerly paid a year for rent. Even more expensive was a “set” of jewelry consisting of an opal brooch, a bracelet of opals and gold filigree, and an opal ring surrounded by diamonds. Grace always had preferred opals to any other stone, but now that she could afford them, some inhibition prevented her from buying them for herself; she could enjoy them much more adorning her pretty daughter. 4
-* There were boxes of silk stockings, lingerie, gloves and handkerchiefs. And for Ted, a three-hundred-dollar watch, a de-luxe edition of Balzac, an expensive bag of shiny, new steel-shafted golf-clubs and the last word of portable phonographs. But the big surprise for the boy was locked in the garage, a black Gorham sedan, a model more up to date and better-looking than Tom’s own year-old car that stood beside it. Ted could use it during the vacation if the mild weather continued and could look forward to driving it around home next spring and summer, there being a rule at the university forbidding undergraduates the possession or use of private automobiles. Every year for sixteen years, since Ted was three and Caroline one, it had been the Christmas Eve custom of the Carters* to hang up their children’s stockings and fill them with inexpensive toys. Tom and Grace had thought it would be fun to continue the custom this year; the contents of the stockings — a mechanical negro dancing doll, music-boxes, a kitten who meowed when you pressed a spot on her back, et cetera — would make the “kids” laugh. And one of Grace’s first pronounce- ments to her returned offspring was that they must go to bed early so Santa Claus would not be frightened away. But it seemed they couldn’t promise to make it so terribly early. They both had long-standing dates in town. Caroline was going to dinner and a play with Beatrice Murdock and Beatrice’s nineteen-year-old broth- er Paul. The latter would call for her in his car at half past six. Ted had accepted an invitation to see the hockey match with two classmates, Herb Castle and Bernard King. He wanted to take his father’s Gorham, but Tom told him untruthfully that the footbrake was not working. Ted must be kept out of the garage till tomorrow morn- ing. Ted and Caroline had taken naps in the afternoon and gone off together in Paul Murdock’s stylish roadster, giving their word that they would be back by midnight or a little later and that tomorrow night they would stay home. And now their mother and father were sitting up for them, because the stockings could not be filled and 5 1
.I i* hung till they were safely in bed, and also because trying to go to sleep is a painful and hopeless business when you are kind of }umpy. •’ . -fv ‘M-i? --- “What time is it?” asked Grace, looking'up from the third page of a book that she had begun to “read” soon after dinner. “Half past two,” said her husband. (He had answered the same question every fifteen or twenty minutes since midnight.) “You don’t suppose anything could have happened?” said Grace. - “We’d have heard if there had,” said Tom. • “It isn’t likely, of course,” said. Grace, “but they might have had an accident some .place where nobody was there to report it or telephone or anything. We don’t • know what kind of a ’ driver the Murdock boy is.” “He’s Ted’s age. Boys that age may be inclined to drive too fast, but they drive pretty well.” z “How do you know?” '. “Well, I’ve watched some of them drive.” , Yes, but not all of them.” “I doubt whether anybody in the world has seen every . nineteen-year-old boy drive.” “Boys these days seem so kind of irresponsible.” ' “Oh, don’t worry! They probably met some of their young friends and stopped for a bite to eat or something. ” Tom got up and walked to the window with studied- carelessness. “It’s a pretty night,” he said. You can see every star in the sky.” But he wasn’t looking at the stars. He was looking down the road for headlights. There were none in sight and after a few moments he returned to his chair. “What time is it?” asked Grace. I . ‘Twenty-two of,” he said. “Of what?” “Of three.” “Your watch must have stopped. Nearly an hour ago you said me it was half past two.” "My watch is all right. You probably dozed- off.” I haven’t closed my eyes.” Well, it’s time you did. Why don’t you go to bed?” Why don’t you?” fh
“I’m not sleepy.” “Neither am I. But honestly, Tom, it’s silly for you to stay up. I’m just doing it so I can fix the stockings, and because I feel so wakeful. But there’s no use of your losing your sleep.” “I couldn’t sleep a wink till they’re home.” “That’s foolishness! There’s nothing to worry about. They’re just having a good time. You were young once yourself.” “That’s just it! When I was young, I was young.” lie picked up his paper and tried to get interested in the shipping news. “What time is it?” asked ' Grace. “Five minutes of three.” “Maybe they’re staying at the Murdocks’ all night.’* “They’d have let us know." “They were afraid to wake us up, telephoning.” At three-twenty a car stopped at the front gate. “There they are!” “I told you there was nothing to worry about.” Tom went to the window. He could just discern the outlines of the Murdock boy’s roadster, whose lighting system seemed to have broken down. “He hasn’t any lights,” said Tom. ‘Maybe I’d better go out and see if I can fix them.” “No, don’t!” said Grace sharply. “He can fix them himself. He’s just saving them while he stands still.’’ “Why don’t they come in?” ; “They’re probably making plans." “They can make them in here. I’ll go out and tell them we’re still up.” “No, don’t!” said Grace as before, and Tom obediently remained at the. window. It was nearly four when the car lights flashed on and the car drove away. Caroline walked into the house and stared dazedly at her parents. “Heavens! What , are you doing up?” ~ Tom was about to say-something, but Grace fore- stalled him. 1 “We were talking over old Christmases,” she said. “Is it very late?” “I haven’t any idea,” said Caroline. “Where is Ted?” i
“Isn’t he home? I haven’t seen him since we dropped him at the hockey place.” “Well, you go right to bed,” said her mother. “You must be worn out.” “I am, kind of. We danced after the play. What time is breakfast?” “Eight o’clock.” “Oh, Mother, can’t you make it nine?” “I guess so. You used to want to get up early on Christ- mas.” “I know, but — ”. “Who brought you home?” asked Tom. “Why, Paul Murdock — and Beatrice.” “You look rumpled.” * “They made me sit in the ‘rumple’ seat.” She laughed at her joke, said good night and went ipstairs. She had not come even within hand-shaking distance of her father and mother. “The Murdocks,” said Tom, “must have great man- ners, making their guest ride in that uncomfortable seat. ” Grace was silent. “You go to bed, too,” said Tom. “I’ll wait for Ted.” "You couldn’t fix the stockings.” “I won’t try. We’ll have time for that in the morning; I mean, later in the morning.” “I’m not going to bed till you go,” said Grace. “All right, we’ll both go. Ted ought not to be long now. I suppose his friends will bring him home. We’ll hear him when he comes in.” There was no chance not to hear him when, at ten minutes before six, he came in. He had done his Christmas shopping late and brought home a package. Grace was downstairs again at half past seven, tell- ing the servants breakfast would be postponed till nine. She nailed the stockings beside the fireplace, went into the music-room to see that nothing had been dis- turbed and removed Ted’s hat and overcoat from where he had carefully hung them on the hall floor. Tom appeared a little, before nine and suggested that the children ought to be awakened. “I’ll wake them,” said Grace, and went upstairs. She opened Ted’s door, looked, and softly closed it 8
lignin. She entered her daughter’s room and found Caro- line semiconscious. “Do I have to get up now? Honestly I can’t eat anything. If you could just have Molla bring me some coffee. Ted: nnd 1 are both invited to the Murdocks* for breakfast at half past twelve, and I could sleep for another hour or two.” “But, dearie, don’t you know we have Christmas dinner at one?” “It’s a shame, Mother, but I thought of course our dinner would be at night.” “Don’t you want to see your presents?” "Certainly I do, but can’t they wait?” Grace was abouUto go to the kitchen to tell the cook that dinner would be at seven instead of one, but she remembered having promised Signe the afternoon and evening off, as a cold, light supper would be all anyone wanted after the heavy midday meal. > Tom and Grace breakfasted alone and once more sat in the living-room, talking, thinking and pretending to read. “You ought to speak to Caroline,” said Tom. “I will, but not today. It’s Christmas.” “And I intend to say a few words to Ted.” “Yes, dear, you must. But not today.” “I suppose they’ll be out again tonight.” “No, they promised to stay home. We’ll have a nico cozy evening.” “Don’t bet too much on that,” said Tom. At noon the “children” made their entrance and responded to their parents* salutations with almost the proper warmth. Ted declined a cup of coffee and he and Caroline apologized for making a “breakfast” date at the Murdocks’. “Sis* and I both thought you’d be having dinner at seven, as usual.” “We’ve always had it at one o’clock on Christmas," said Tom. “I’d forgotten it was Christmas,” said Ted. “Well, those stockings ought to remind you.” Ted and Caroline looked at the bulging stockings. “Isn’t there,a tree?” asked Caroline. "Of course,” said her mother. “But the stockings come first.” . 9
“We’ve only a little time,” said Caroline. “We’ll be terribly late as it is. So can’t we see the tree now?” “I guess so,” said Grace, and led the way into the music-room. The servants were summoned and the tree stared at and admired. “You must open your presents,” said Grace to her daughter. “I can’t open them all now,” said Caroline. “Tell me which is special.” The cover was removed from the huge box and Grace held up the coat. “Oh, Mother!” said Caroline. “A sealskin coat!” “Put it on,” said her father. “Not now. We haven’t time.” ‘Then look at this!” said Grace, and opened the case of jewels. “Oh, Mother! Opals!” said Caroline. “They’re my favourite stone,” said Grace quietly. “If nobody minds,” said Ted, “I’ll postpone my per- sonal investigation till we get back. I know I’ll like everything you’ve given me. But if we have no car in working order, I've got to call a taxi and catch a train.” “You can drive in,” said his father. “Did you fix the brake?" “I think it’s all right. Come up to the garage and we’ll see.” Ted got his hat and coat and kissed his mother good-by. “Mother,” he said, “I know you’ll forgive me for not having any presents for you and Dad. I was so rushed the last three days at school. And I thought I’d have time to shop a little when we got in yesterday, but I was in too much of a hurry to be home. Last night, every- thing was closed.” “Don’t worry,” said Grace, “Christmas is for young people. Dad ’and I have everything we want.” The servants had found their gifts and dissappeared, expressing effusive Scandinavian thanks. Caroline and her mother were left alone. “Mother, where did the coat come from?” “Lloyd and Henry’s.” “They keep all kinds of furs, don’t they?” “Yes.”
“Would you mind horribly if I exchanged this?” “Certainly not, dear. You pick out anything you like, and if it’s a little more expensive, it won’t make any difference. We can go in town tomorrow or next day. But don’t you want to wear your opals to the Mur- docks’?” “I don’t believe so. They might get lost or something. And I’m not — well, I’m not so crazy about — “I think they can be exchanged too,” said Grace. “You run along now and get ready to start.” Caroline obeyed with alacrity, and Grace spent a welcome moment by herself. Tom opened the garage door. “Why, you’ve got two cars!” said Ted. “The new one isn’t mine,” said Tom. “Whose is it?” “Yours. It’s the new model.” “Dad, that’s wonderful! But it looks just like the old one.” “Well, the old one’s pretty good. Just the same, ~ yours is better. You’ll find that out when you drive it. Hop in and get started, I had her filled with gas.” “I think I’d rather drive the old one.” “Why?” “Well, what I really wanted, Dad, was a Barnes sport roadster, something like Paul Murdock’s, only a different color scheme. And if I don’t drive this Gorham at all, maybe you could get them to take it back or make some kind of a deal with the Barnes people.” Tom didn’t speak till he was sure of his voice. Then: “All right, son. Take my car and I’ll see what can be done about yours.” Caroline, waiting for Ted, remembered something and called to her mother. “Here’s what I got for you and Dad,” she said. “It’s two tickets to Jolly Jane, the play I saw last night. You’ll love it!” “When are they for?” asked Grace. “Tonight,” said Caroline. “But, dearie,” said her mother, “we don’t want to go out tonight, when you promised to stay home.” “We’ll keep our promise,” said Caroline, “but the Murdocks may drop in and. bring some friends and we’ll dance and there’ll be music. And Ted, and I both thought 11
I' you’d rather be away somewhere so our noise wouldn’t disturb you.” “It was sweet of you to do this,” said her mother, s “hut your father and I don’t mind noise as long as you’re enjoying yourselves.” “It’s time anyway that you and Dad had a treat.” “The real treat,” said Grace, “would be to spend a quiet evening here with just you two.” “The Murdocks practically invited themselves and I couldn’t say no after they’d been so nice to me. And hon- estly, Mother, you’ll love this play!” “Will you he home for supper?” “I’m pretty sure we will, but if we’re a little late, don’t you and Dad wait for us. Take the seven-twenty so you won’t miss anything. The first act is really the best. We probably won’t be hungry, but have Signe leave something out for us in case we are.” Tom and Grace sat down to the elaborate Christmas dinner and didn’t make much impression on it. Even if they had had any appetite, the sixteen-pound turkey would have looked almost like new when they had eaten their fill. Conversation was intermittent and related chiefly to Signe’s excellence as a cook and the mildness of the weather. Children and Christmas were barely touched on. Tom merely suggested that on account of its being a holiday and their having theatre tickets, they ought to take the six-ten and eat supper at the Metropole. His wife said no; Ted and Caroline might come home and he dissappointed at not finding them. Tom seemed about to make some remark, but changed his mind. The afternoon was the longest Grace had ever known. The children were still absent at seven and she and Tom taxied to the train. Neither talked much on the way to town. As for the play, which Grace was sure to love, it turned out to be a rehash of Cradle Snatchers and Sex* retaining the worst features of each. When it was over, Tom said: “Now I am inviting you to the Cove Club. You didn’t eat any breakfast or dinner or supper and I can’t have you starving to death on a feast-day. Besides, I’m thirsty as well as hungry.” They ordered the special table d'hote and struggled hard to get away with it. Tom drank six highballs, but 12
I hoy failed to produce the usual effect of making him jovial. Grace had one highball and some kind of cor- dial that gave her a warm, contented feeling for a moment. Bui the warmth and contentment left her before the train was half way home. The living-room looked as if Von Kluck’s* army had just passed through. Ted and Caroline had kept their promise up to a certain point. They had spent part of the evening at home, and the Murdocks must have brought all their own friends and everybody else’s, judging from the results. The tables and floors were strewn with empty glasses, ashes and cigaret stubs. The stockings had been torn off their nails and wrecked contents were all over the place. Two sizable holes had been burnt in Grace’s favorite rug. Tom took his wife by the arm and led her into the music-room. “You never took the trouble to open your own present,” he said. “And I think there’s one for you, too,” said Grace. “They didn’t come in here,” she added, “so I guess there wasn’t much dancing or music.” Tom found his gift from Grace, a set of diamond sluds and cuff buttons for festive wear. Grace’s present from him was an opal ring. “Oh, Tom!” she said. “We’ll have to go out somewhere tomorrow night, so I can break these in,”* said Tom. “Well, if we do that, we’d better get a good night’s rest.” “I’ll beat* you upstairs,” said Tom.
FOR DISCUSSION 1. Are we asked to have an attitude toward the characters? Does the author have an attitude toward them? 2. Does the author show more favour to the parents than to the children? 3. What details show you the parents* feelings toward their children, their love and tact? 4. Comment on the details showing Tom and Grace Carters’ attitude toward each other. 5. What conclusions about the characters of Ted and Caroline can you draw from the first episodes of the story? Do these con- clusions change while reading the story? 6. Are you surprized at the young people’s behaviour or does it seem quite normal to you? Explain your answer. 7. Is the time, of the action an important element in this story? Is the story strengthened or weakened by the actions taking place during Christmas? 8. Is the story emotionally moving? What details produce an emotional reaction? • 9. Tragical motives run through R. Lardner’s story. How can you reveal them? 10. Why is there such a great difference between the parents and the children? 11. What is, in your opinion, the basis for a healthy and affec- tionate relationship between parents and children? 12. Is the problem of father-son relationship the only one in the story or are there any other problems?
Stacy Aumonier MISS BRACEGIRDLE DOES HER DUTY “This is the room, madame.” “Ah, thank you... thank you.” “Does it appear satisfactory to madame?” “Oh, yes, thank you... quite.” “Does madame require anything further?” “Er — if not too late, may I have a hot bath?” “Parfaitement* madame. The bathroom is at the end of the passage on the left. I will go and prepare it for madame.” “There is one thing more... I have had a very long journey. I am very tired. Will you please see that I am not disturbed in the morning until I ring.” “Certainly, madame.” 15
Millicent Bracegirdle was speaking the truth — she was tired. In the sleepy cathedral town of Easingstoke, from which she came, it was customary for every one to speak truth. It was customary, moreover, for every one to lead simple, self-denying lives — to give up their time to good works and elevating thoughts. One had only to glance at little Miss Bracegirdle to see that £ in her were epitomized all the virtues and ideals of Easing- stoke. Indeed, it was the pursuit of duly which had brought her to the Hotel de 1’Quest at Bordeaux* on this summer’s night. She had travelled from Easingstoke to London, then without a break to Dover,* crossed that horrid stretch of sea to Calais,* entrained for Paris, where she of necessity had to spend four hours — a terrifying experience — and then had come on to Bor- deaux, arriving at midnight. The reason of this journey being that someone had to come to Bordeaux to meet her young sister-in-law, who was arriving the next day from South America. The sister-in-law was married , to a missionary in Paraguay, but the climate not agreeing with her, she was returning to England. Her dear brother, the dean, would have come himself, but the claims on his time were so extensive, the parishioners would miss him so... it was clearly Millicent’s duty to go. She had never been out of England before, and she had a horror of travel, and an ingrained distrust of foreign- ers. She spoke a little French— sufficient for ihe purposes of travel and for obtaining any modest neces- sities, but not sufficient for carrying on any kind of conversation. She did not deplore this latter fact, for she was of opinion that French people were not the kind of people that one would naturally want to have con- versation with; broadly speaking, they were not quite “nice”, in spite of their ingratiating manners. The dear dean had given her endless advice, warning her earnestly not to enter into conversation with stran- gers, to obtain all information from the police, railway officials — in fact, any one in an official uniform. He deeply regretted to say that he was afraid that France was not a country for a woman to travel about in alone. There were loose, bad people about, always on the look- out... He really thought perhaps he ought not to let her go. It was only by the utmost persuasion, in which iG
she rather exaggerated her knowledge of the French language and character, her courage, and indifference to discomfort, that she managed to carry the day. She unpacked her valise, placed her things about the room, tried to thrust hack the little stabs of homesick- ness as she visualized her darling room at the deanery. JI ow strange and hard and unfriendly seemed these foreign hotel bedrooms — heavy and depressing, no chintz and lavender and photographs of ... all the dear family, the dean, the nephews and nieces, the interior of the cathedral during harvest festival, no samplers and needlework or coloured reproductions of the paint- ings by Marcus Stone.* Oh dear, how foolish she was! "What did she expect? She disrobed and donned a dressing-gown; then, armed with a sponge-bag* and towel, she crept timidly down the passage to the bathroom, after closing her bedroom door and turning out the light. The gay bath- room cheered her. She wallowed luxuriously in the hot water, regarding her slim legs with quiet satisfaction. And for the first time since leaving home there came to her a pleasant moment — a sense of enjoyment in her adventure. After all, it was rather an adventure, and her life had been peculiarly devoid of it. What queer lives some people must live, travelling about, having experiences! How old was she? Not really old — not by any means. Forty-two? Forty-three? She had shut herself up so. She hardly ever regarded the potentiali- ties of age. As the world went, she was a well-preserved woman for her age. A life of self-abnegation, simple living, healthy walking and fresh air, had kept her younger than these hurrying, pampered city people. Love? yes, once when she was a young girl... he was a schoolmaster, a most estimable kind gentleman. They were never engaged — not actually, but it was a kind of understood thing. For three years it went on, this pleasant understanding and friendship. He was so gentle, so distinguished and considerate. She would have been happy to have continued in this strain for ever. But there was something lacking. Stephen had curious rest- less lapses. From the physical aspect of marriage she shrunk — yes, even with Stephen, who was gentleness and kindness itself. And then one day... one day he 17
went away — vanished, and never returned. They told her he had married one of the country girls — a girl > used to work in Mrs Forbes’s dairy — not a very nice girl, she feared, one of these fast, pretty, foolish women. Heighol* well, she had lived that down, destructive as the blow appeared at the time. One lives everything down in time. There is always work, living for others, faith, duty... At the same time she could sympathize with people who found satisfaction in unusual experi- ences. There would be lots to tell the dear dean when she wrote to him on the morrow; nearly losing her spectacles on the restaurant car; the amusing remarks of an American child on the train to Paris, the curious food everywhere, nothing simple and plain; the two English ladies at the hotel in Paris who told her about the death of their uncle — the poor man being taken ill on Friday and dying on Sunday afternoon, just before tea-time; the kindness of the hotel proprietor who has sat up for her; the prettiness of the chambermaid. Oh, yes, every one was really very kind. The French people, after all, were very nice. She had seen nothing — nothing but was quite nice and decorous; There would be lots to tell the dean tomorrow. Her body glowed with the friction of the towel. She again donned her night attire and her thick, wool- len dressing-gown. She tidied up the bathroom carefully in exactly the same, way she was accustomed to do at home, then once more gripping her sponge-bag and towel, and turning out the light, she crept down the passage to her room. Entering the room she switched on the light and shut the door quickly. Then one of those ri- diculous things happened — just the kind of thing you would expect to happen in a foreign hotel. The handle of the door came off in her hand. She ejaculated a quiet “Bother!” and sought to re place it with one hand, the other being occupied with the towel and sponge-bag. In doing this she behaved foolishly, for thrusting the knob carelessly against the steel pin — without properly securing it — she only suc- ceeded in pushing the pin farther into the door and the knob was not adjusted. She uttered another little “Both- er!” and put her sponge-bag and towel down on the 18 '
floor. She then tried to recover the pin with her left hand, but it had gone in too far. "How very foolish!” she thought, “I shall have to ring for the chambermaid — and perhaps the poor girl has gone to bed.” She turned and faced the room, and suddenly the awful horror was upon her. There was a man asleep in her bed! The sight of that swarthy face on the pillow, with its black tousled hair and heavy moustache, produced in her the most terrible moment of her life. Her heart nearly stopped. For some seconds she could neither think nor scream, and her first thought was: “I mustn’t scream!” She stood there like one paralysed, staring at the man’s head and the great curved hunch of his body under the clothes. When she began to think she thought very quickly, and all her thoughts worked together. The first vivid realization was that it wasn’t the man’s fault; it was her fault. She was in the wrong room. It was the man’s room. The rooms were identical, but there were all his things about, his clothes thrown carelessly over chairs, his collar and tie on the wardrobe, his great heavy boots and the strange yellow trunk. She must get out somehow, anyhow. She clutched once more at the door, feverishly driv- ing her finger-nails into the hole where the elusive pin had vanished. She tried to force her fingers in the crack and open the door that way, but it was of no avail. She was to all intents and purposes locked in — locked in a bedroom in a strange hotel alone with a man... a for- eigner ... a Frenchman! She must think. She must think. ... She switched off the light. If the light was off he might not wake up. It might give her time to think how to act. It was surprising that he had not awakened. If he did wake up, what would he do? How could she explain herself? He wouldn’t believe her. No one would believe her. In an English hotel it would be difficult enough, but here where she wasn’t known, where they were all foreigners and consequently antagonistic... merciful heavens! She must get out. Should she wake the man? No, she couldn’t do that. He might murder her. He might...-
Oh, it was too awful to contemplate! Should she scream? ring for the chambermaid? But no, it would be the same thing. People would come rushing.- They would find her there in the strange man’s bedroom after midnight — she, Millicent Bracegirdle, sister of the Dean of Easingstoke! Easingstoke! Visions of Easingstoke flashed through her alarmed mind. Visions of the news arriving, women whispering around tea-tables: “Have you heard, my dear? ... Beally no one would have imagined! Her poor brother! He will of course have to resign, you know, my dear. Have a little more cream, my love.” Would they put her in prison? She might be in the room for the purpose of stealing or... She might be in the room for the purpose of breaking every one of the ten commandments. There was no explaining it away. She was a ruined woman, suddenly and irretrievably, unless she could open the door. The chimney? Should she climb up the chimney? But where would that lead to? And then she visualized the man pulling her down by her legs when she was already smothered in soot. Any moment he might wake up. ... She thought she heard the chambermaid going along the passage. If she had wanted to scream, she ought to have screamed before. The maid would know she had left the bathroom some minutes ago. Was she going to her room? Suddenly she remembered that she had told the chambermaid that she was not to be disturbed until she rang the next morning. That was something. No- body would be going to her room to find out that she was not there. An abrupt and desperate plan formed in her mind. It was already getting on for one o’clock. The man was probably a quite harmless commercial traveller or busi- ness man. He would probably get up about seven or eight o’clock, dress quickly, and go out. She would hide under his bed until he went. Only a matter of a few hours. Men don’t look under their beds, although she made a religious practice of doing so herself. When he went he would be sure to open the door all right. The handle would be lying on the floor as though it had dropped off in the night. He would probably ring for the chambermaid or open it with a penknife. Men were 20
но clever at those things. When he had gone she would ciecp out and steal back to her room and then there would be no necessity to give any explanation to any one. But heavens! What an experience! Once under the while frill of that bed she would be safe till the morning. In daylight nothing seemed so terrifying. With feline precaution she went down on her hands and knees and crept toward the bed. What a lucky thing (here was that broad white frill! She lifted it at the foot of lhe bed and crept under. There was just sufficient depth to take her slim body. The floor was fortunately carpeted all over, but it seemed very close and dusty. Suppose she coughed or sneezed! Anything might happen. Of course... it would be much more difficult to explain her presence under the bed than to explain her presence just inside the door. She held her breath in suspense. No sound came from above, but under this frill it was difficult to hear anything. It was almost more nerve- racking than hearing everything... listening for signs and portents. This temporary escape in any case would give her time to regard the predicament detachedly. Up to the present she had not been able to visualize the full significance of her action. She had in truth lost her head. She had been like a wild animal, consumed with the sole idea of escape... a mouse or a cat would do this kind of thing — take cover and lie low. If only il hadn’t all happened abroad\ She tried to frame sentences of explanation in French, but French escaped her. And then — they talked so rapidly, these people. They didn’t listen. The situation was intolerable. Would she be able to endure a night of it? At present she was not altogether uncomfortable, only stuffy and ... very, very frightened. But she had to face six or seven or eight hours of it — perhaps even then discovery in the end! The minutes flashed by as she turned the matter over and over in her head. There was no solution. She began to wish she had screamed or awakened the man. She saw now that that would have been the wisest and most politic thing to do; but she had allowed ten minutes or a quarter of an hour to elapse from the moment when the chambermaid would know that she had left the bathroom. They would want an explanation of what she had been doing in the man’s 21
bedroom all that time. Why hadn’t she screamed be- . fore? ’ She lifted the frill an inch or two and listened. She ’ thought she heard the man breathing but she couldn’t^ be sure. In any case it gave her more air. She became a little bolder, and thrust her face partly through the frill so that she could breathe freely. She tried to steady ‘ her nerves by concentrating on the fact that — well, ; there it was. She had done it. She must make the best of it. Perhaps it would be all right after all. “Of course I shan’t sleep,’’she kept on thinking, “Ishan’t be able to. In any case it will be safer not to sleep. I must be on the watch.” She set her teeth and waited grimly. Now that she had made up her mind to see the thing through in this 1 manner she felt a little calmer. She almost smiled as she reflected that there would certainly be something to tell the dear dean when she wrote to him tomorrow. How would he take it? Of course he would believe it — ' he had never doubted a single word that she had uttered 1 in her life — but the story would sound so... preposter- • ous. In Easingstoke it would be almost impossible to ' envisage such an experience. She, Millicent Bracegirdle, spending a night under a strange man’s bed in a foreign hotel! What would those women think? Fanny Shields and that garrulous old Mrs Rushbridger? Perhaps ... 1 yes, perhaps it would be advisable to tell the dear dean to j let the story go no further. One could hardly expect Mrs j Rushbridger to ... not make implications ... exaggerate. ’ Oh, dear! What were they all doing now? They would be all asleep, every one in Easingstoke. Her dear brother , always retired at ten-fifteen. He would be sleeping calmly and placidly, the sleep of the just... breathing the clear sweet air of Sussex, not this — oh, it was stuffy! She felt a great desire to cough. She mustn’t do that. Yes, I at nine-thirty all the servants summoned to the library — a short service — never more than fifteen minutes, ( her brother didn’t believe in a great deal of ritual — then at ten o’clock cocoa for every one. At ten-fifteen bed for every one. The dear sweet bedroom with the ; narrow white bed, by the side of which she had knelt 1 every night as long as she could remember — even in i her dear mother’s day — and said her prayers.
Prayers! Yes, that was a curious thing. This was tlio first night in her life’s experience that she had not Hi id her prayers on retiring. The situation was certainly very peculiar... exceptional, one might call it. God would understand and forgive such a lapse. And yet after all, why ... what was to prevent her saying her prayers? Of course she couldn’t kneel in the proper de- votional attitude, that would be a physical impossi- bility; nevertheless, perhaps her prayers might be just ns efficacious... if they came from the heart. So little Miss Bracegirdle curved her body and placed her hands in a devout attitude in front of her face and quite in- audibly murmured her prayers under the strange man’s bed. “Our Father which art in heaven, Hallowed be Thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth ns it is in heaven; Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our trespasses...” Trespasses! Yes, surely she was trespassing on this occasion, but God would understand. She had not wanted to trespass. She was an unwitting sinner. Without ut- tering a sound she went through her usual prayers in her heart. At the end she added fervently: “Please God protect me from the dangers and perils of this night.” Then she lay silent and inert, strangely soothed by the effort of praying. “After all,” she thought, “it isn’t the attitude which matters — it is that which occurs deep down in us.” For the first time she began to meditate — almost to question — church forms and dogma. If an attitude was not indispensable, why a building, a ritual, a church at all? Of course her dear brother couldn't be wrong, the church was so old, so very old, its root deep buried in the story of human life, it was only that... well, out- ward forms could be misleading. Her own present posi- tion for instance. In the eyes of the world she had, by one silly careless little action, convicted herself of being the breaker of every single one of the ten commandments. She tried to think of one of which she could not be accused. But no — even to dishonouring her father and mother, bearing false witness, stealing, coveting her neighbour’s ... husband! That was the worst thing of 23
Г,Г‘ all. Poor man! He might be a very pleasant honourable '; married gentleman with children and she — she was in a position to compromise him! Why hadn’t she screamed? Too late! Too late! • 4 It began to get very uncomfortable, stuffy, but at the same time draughty, and the floor was getting hard-. er every minute. She changed her position stealthily and controlled her desire to cough. Her heart was beating rapidly. Over and over again recurred the vivid impres- sion of every little incident and argument that had occurred to her from the moment she left the bathroom. This must, of course, be the room next to her own. So confusing, with perhaps twenty bedrooms all exactly ' alike on one side of a passage — how was one to remember whether one’s number was 115 or 116? Her mind began to wander idly off into her school- days. She was always very bad at figures. She disliked Euclid* and all those subjects about angles and equa- tions — so unimportant, not leading anywhere. History she liked, and botany, and reading about strange foreign lands, although she had always been too timid to visit them. And the lives of great people, most fascinating — Oliver Cromwell,* Lord Beaconsfield,* Lincoln,* Grace Darling* — there was a heroine for you — General Booth,* a great, good man, even if a little vulgar. She remembered dear old Miss Trimming talking about him one afternoon at the vicar of St. Bride’s* garden party. She was so amusing. She... Good heavens! Almost unwittingly, Millicent Bracegirdle had emitted a violent sneeze! It was finished! For the second time that night she was conscious of her heart nearly stopping. For the second time that night she was so paralysed with fear that her mentality went to pieces. Now she would hear the man get out of bed. He would walk across to the door, switch on the light, and then lift up the frill. She could almost see that fierce moustached face glaring at her and growl- ing something in French. Then he would thrust out an arm and drag her out. And then? О God in heaven! What then?... “I shall scream before he does it. Perhaps I had better scream now. If he drags me out he will clap his hand over my mouth. Perhaps chloroform...” 24 I
But somehow she could not scream. She was too fright- ened even for that. She lifted the frill and listened. Was he moving stealthily across the carpet? She thought— no, she couldn’t be sure. Anything might be happening, lie might strike her from above — with one of those heavy boots perhaps. Nothing seemed to be happening, but the suspense was intolerable. She realized now that she hadn’t the power to endure a night of it. Anything would be better than this — disgrace, imprisonment, even death. She would crawl out, wake the man, and Iry and explain as best she could. She would switch on the light, cough, and say: “Mon- sieur!'’ Then he would start up and stare at her. Then she would say — what should she say? “Pardon, monsieur, mats je —” What on earth was the French for ‘I have made a mistake.’ “J ’at tort. C'est la chambre — er — incorrect. Voulez- vous — er —” What was the French for ‘door-knob,’ ‘let me go’? It didn’t matter. She would turn on the light, cough and trust to luck. If he got out of bed, and came toward her, she would scream the hotel down ... The resolution formed, she crawled deliberately out at the foot of the bed. She scrambled hastily toward the door — a perilous journey. In a few seconds the room was flooded with light. She turned toward the bed, coughed, and cried out boldly: “M onsieur!" Then, for the third time that night, little Miss Brace- girdle’s heart all but stopped. In this case the climax of the horror took longer to develop, but when it was reached, it clouded* the other two experiences into insig- nificance. The man on the bed was dead! She had never beheld death before, but one does not mistake death. She stared at him bewildered, and repeated almost in a whisper: “Monsieur! ... Monsieur! ” Then she tiptoed toward the bed. The hair and mous- tache looked extraordinarily black in that grey, wax-like setting. The mouth was slightly open, and the face, 25
which in life might have been vicious and sensual, looked incredibly peaceful and far away. It was as though she were regarding the features of a man across some vast passage of time, a being who had always been com- pletely remote from mundane preoccupations. When the full truth came home to her, little Miss Bracegirdle buried her face in her hands and mur- mured: "Poor fellow... poor fellow!” For the moment her own position seemed an affair of small consequence. She was in the presence of some- thing greater and more all-pervading. Almost instinc- tively she knelt by the bed and prayed. For a few moments she seemed to be possessed by an extraordinary calmness and detachment. The burden of her hotel predicament was a gossamer* trouble — a silly, trivial, almost comic episode, something that could be .explained away. But this man — he had lived his life, whatever it was like, and now he was in the presence of his Maker. What kind of man had he been? Her meditations were broken by an abrupt sound. It was that of a pair of heavy boots being thrown down by the door outside. She started, thinking at first it was someone knocking or trying to get in. She heard the “boots,” however, stumping away down the corridor, and the realization stabbed her with the truth of her own position. She mustn’t stop there. The necessity to | get out was even more urgent. To be found in a strange man’s bedroom in the night ; is bad enough, but to be found in a dead man’s bedroom was even worse. They could accuse her of murder, perhaps. Yes, that would be it — how could she possibly explain to these foreigners? Good God! they would hang her. - j No, guillotine her, that’s what they do in France. They would chop her head off with a great steel knife. Merci- ful heavens! She envisaged herself standing blindfold, by a priest and an executioner in a red cap, like that ' man in the Dickens story — what was his name?... Sydney Carton,* that was it, and before he went on the scaffold he said: “It is a far, far better thing that I do than I have ever done.” 26
But no, she couldn’t say that. It would be a far, far worse thing that she did. What about the dear dean? 1 ler sister-in-law arriving alone from Paraguay tomorrow? All her dear people and friends in Easingstoke? Her darling Tony, the large grey tabby cat? It was her duty not to have her head chopped off if it could possibly be avoided. She could do no good in the room. She could not recall the dead to life. Her only mission was to escape. Any minute people might arrive. The chambermaid, the boots, the manager, the gendarmes. ... Visions of gendarmes arriving armed with swords and note-books vitalized her almost exhausted energies. She was a des- perate woman. Fortunately now she had not to worry about the light. She sprang once more at the door and tried to force it open with her fingers. The result hurt her and gave her pause. If she was to escape she must think, and think intensely. She mustn’t do anything rash and silly, she must just think and plan calmly. She examined the lock carefully. There was no keyhole, but there was a slip-bolts so that the hotel guest could lock the door on the inside, but it couldn’t be locked on the outside. Oh, why didn’t this poor dear dead man lock his door last night? Then this trouble could not have happened. She could see the end of the steel pin. It was about half an inch down the hole. If any one was passing they must surely notice the handle sticking out too far the other side! She drew a hairpin out of her hair and tried to coax the pin back,* but she only succeeded in pushing it a little farther in. She felt the colour leaving her face, and a strange feeling of faintness come over her. She was fighting for her life, she mustn’t give way. She darted round the room like an animal in a trap, her mind alert for the slightest crevice of escape. The window had no balcony and there was a drop of five stories to the sreet below. Dawn was breaking. Soon the activities of the hotel and the city would begin. The thing must be accomplished before then. She went back once more and stared at the lock. She stared at the dead man’s property, his razors, and brushes, and writing materials, pens and pencils and rubber and sealing-wax... Sealing-wax! 27
Necessity is truly the mother of invention. It is in any case quite certain that Millicent Bracegirdle, who had never invented a thing in her life, would never have evolved the ingenious little device she did, had she not believed that her position was utterly desperate. For in the end this is what she did. She got together a box of matches, a candle, a bar of sealing-wax, and a hairpin. She made a little pool of hot sealing-wax, into which she dipped the end of the hairpin. Collecting a small blob on the end of it she thrust it into the hole, and let it adhere to the end of the steel pin. At the sev- enth attempt she got the thing to move. It took her just an hour and ten minutes to get that steel pin back into the room, and when at length it came far enough through for her to grip it with her finger-nails, she burst into tears through the sheer physical tension of the strain. Very, very carefully she pulled it through, and holding it firmly with her left hand she fixed the knob with her right, then slowly turned it. The door opened! The temptation to dash out into the corridor and scream with relief was almost irresistible, but she forbore. She listened; she peeped out. No one was about. With beating heart, she went out, closing the door inaudibly. She crept like a little mouse to the room next door, stole in and flung herself on her bed. Immediately she did so it flashed through her mind that she had left her sponge- bag and towel in the dead man's room! In looking back upon her experience she always considered that that second expedition was the worst of all. She might have left the sponge-bag and towel there, only that the towel — she never used hotel towels — had neatly inscribed in the corner “M. B.” With furtive caution she managed to retrace her steps. She re-entered the dead man’s room, reclaimed her property, and returned to her own. When this mis- sion was accomplished she was indeed wellnigh spent. She lay on her bed and groaned feebly. At last she fell into a fevered sleep. ... It was eleven o’clock when she awoke and no one had been to disturb her. The sun was shining, and the experience of the night appeared a dubious nightmare. Surely she had dreamt it all! 28
With dread still burning in her heart she rang the lirll. After a short interval of time the chambermaid appeared. The girl’s eyes were bright with some uncontrol- lable excitement. No, she had not been dreaming. This girl had heard something. “Will you bring me some tea, please?” "Certainly, madame.” The maid drew back the curtains and fussed about the room. She was under a pledge of secrecy, but she could contain herself no longer. Suddenly she approached the bed and whispered excitedly: “Oh, madame, I have promised not to tell... but a terrible thing has happened. A man, a dead man, has been found in room 117 — a guest. Please not to say I tell you. But they have all been there, the gendarmes, the doctors, the inspectors. Oh, it is terrible... terrible.” The little lady in the bed said nothing. There was indeed nothing to say. But Marie Louise Lancret was too full of emotional excitement to spare her. “But the terrible thing is — Do you knew who he was, madame? They say it is Boldhu, the man wanted for the murder of Jeanne Carreton in the barn at Vin- cennes.* They say he strangled her, then cut her up in pieces and hid her in two barrels which he threw into the river... Oh, but he was a bad man, madame, a terrible bad man... and he died in the room next door... suicide, they think; or was it an attack of the heart? ... Bemorse, some shock perhaps... Did you say a cafe complei* madame?” “No, thank you, my dear... just a cup of tea... strong lea ...” “Parfaitement, madame.” The girl retired, and a little later a waiter entered the room with a tray of tea. She could never get over her surprise at this. It seemed so — well, indecorous for a man — although only a waiter — to enter a lady’s bedroom. There was no doubt a great deal in what the dear dean said. They were certainly very peculiar, these French people — they had most peculiar notions. It was not the way they behaved at Easingstoke. She got farther under the sheets, but the waiter appeared quite indifferent to the situation. He put the tray down and retired. ' - 29
When he had gone she sat up and sipped her tea, which gradually warmed her. She was glad the sun was shining. She would have to get up soon. They said that her sister-in-law’s boat was due to berth at one o’clock. That would give her time to dress comfortably, write to her brother, and then go down to the docks. Poor man! So he had been a murderer, a man who cut up the bodies of his victims... and she had spent the night in his bedroom! They were certainly a most — how could she describe it? people. Nevertheless she felt a little glad that at the end she had been there to kneel and pray by his bedside. Probably nobody else had ever done that. It was very difficult to judge people. ... Some- thing at some time might have gone wrong. He might not have murdered the woman after all. People were often wrongly convicted. She herself... If the police had found her in that room at three o’clock that morn- ing... It is that which takes place in the heart which counts. One learns and learns. Had she not learnt that one- can pray just as effectively lying under a bed as kneeling beside it? ... Poor man! She washed and dressed herself and walked calmly down to the writing-room. There was no evidence of excitement among the other hotel guests. Probably none of them knew about the tragedy except herself. She went to a writing-table and after profound meditation wrote as follows: “My dear Brother, “I. arrived late last night after a very pleasant journey. Every one was very kind and attentive, the manager was sitting up for me. I nearly lost my spectacle case in the restaurant car! But a kind old gentleman found it and returned it to me. There was a most amusing American child on the train. I will tell you about her on my return. The people are very pleasant, but the food is peculiar, nothing plain and wholesome. I am going down to meet Annie at one o’clock. How have you been keeping, my dear? I hope you have not had any further return of the bronchial attacks. “Please tell Lizzie that I remembered in the train on the way here that that large stone jar of marmalade that Mrs Hunt made is behind those empty tins in the top shelf of the cupboard next to the coach-house. I 30 1
wonder whether Mrs Butler was able to come to evensong* after all? This is a nice hotel, but I think Annie and I will stay at the ‘Grand’ tonight, as the bedrooms here are rather noisy. Well, my dear, nothing more till I return. Do take care of yourself. — Your loving sister, “Millicent. ” Yes, she couldn’t tell Peter about it, neither in the letter nor when she went back to him. It was her duty not to tell him. It would only distress him; she felt con- vinced of it. In this curious foreign atmosphere the thing appeared possible, but in Easingstoke the mere recount- ing of the fantastic situations would be positively... indelicate. There was no escaping that broad general fact she had spent a night in a strange man’s bedroom. Whether he was a gentleman or a criminal, even whether he was dead or alive, did not seem to mitigate the jar upon her sensibilities, or rather it would not mitigate the jar upon the peculiarly sensitive relationship be- tween her brother and herself. To say that she had been to the bathroom, the knob of the door-handle came off in her hand, she was too frightened to awaken the sleep- er or scream, she got under the bed — well, it was all perfectly true. Peter would believe her, but — one simply could not conceive such a situation in Easingstoke deanery. It would create a curious little barrier between them, as though she had been dipped in some mysterious solution which alienated her. It was her duty not to tell. She put on her hat, and went out to post the letter. She distrusted an hotel letter-box. One never knew who handled these letters. It was not a proper official way of treating them. She walked to the head post office in Bordeaux. The sun was shining. It was very pleasant walking about amongst these queer excitable people, so foreign and different-looking — and the cafes already crowded with chattering men and women, and the flower stalls, and the strange odour of — what was it? Salt? Brine? Charcoal?... A military band was playing in the square... very gay and moving. It was all life, and movement, and bustle... thrilling rather. “I spent a night in a strange man’s bedroom.” Little Miss Bracegirdle hunched her shoulders, mur- mured to herself, and walked faster. She reached the 31
post office and found the large metal plate with the slot for letters and “R. F.”* stamped above it. Something official at last! Her face was a little flushed — was it the warmth of the day or the contact of movement and .v life! — as she put her letter into the slot. After posting it she put her hand into the slot and flicked it round to see that there were no foreign contraptions to impede 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 its safe delivery. No, the letter had dropped safely in. She sighed contentedly and walked off in the direction of the docks to meet her sister-in-law from Paraguay. FOR DISCUSSION 1. The way of expressing the story is irony. What is the irony of the title? 2. What is the specific target of the author’s irony? What other subjects receive ironic comment? 3. Does the comic quality of the story arise from the unfold- ing situation, from a sequence of situations, or from the character portrayal? 4. Are there any ironies of situation? 5. Are there any other techniques to convey ridicule or mock- ery in the story? 6. Does the setting contribute any idea that modifies the reader’s understanding of the character? 7. In your opinion, why does the author include the details of the life in Easingstoke into the narrative? 8. Give an imaginary portrait of Miss Bracegirdle’s brother. 9. What was Miss Bracegirdle’s motto? Did she live up to it? 10. Did the incident in the hotel change Miss Bracegirdle’s character in any way? 11. Are there any features of English national character in Miss Bracegirdle’s thoughts and actions? 12. What is the author’s attitude toward his story? Amused? Serious in any way? Support your answer with evidence from tho story.
James Thurber THE CATBIRD SEAT Mr Martin bought the pack of Camels * on Monday night in the most crowded cigar store on Broadway. It was theatre time and seven or eight men were buying cigarettes. The clerk didn’t even glance at Mr Martin, who put the pack in his overcoat pocket and went out. If any of the staff at F & S * had seen him buy the ciga- rettes, they would have been astonished, for it was gener- ally known that Mr Martin did not smoke, and never had. No one saw him. It was just a week to the day since Mr Martin had decided to rub out Mrs Ulgine Barrows. The term “rub out” pleased him because it suggested nothing more than the correction of an error — in this case an error of Mr 2 И. В. Ступников 33
Fitweiler. Mr Martin had spent each night of the past; week working out his plan and examining it. As he' walked home now he went over it again. For the hundredth time he resented the element of imprecision, the margin; of guesswork that entered into the business. The project as he had worked it out was casual and bold, the risks were considerable. Something might go wrong anywhere j along the line. And therein lay the cunning of his scheme.®1 No one would ever see in it the cautious, painstaking hand4 of Erwin Martin, head of the filing department * at: F & S, of whom Mr Fitweiler had once said, “Man is fallible but Martin isn’t.” No one would see his hand,,, that is, unless it were caught in the act. Sitting in his apartment, drinking a glass of milk,: Mr Martin reviewed his case against Mrs Ulgine Barrows, ‘ as he had every night for seven nights. He began at the..’ beginning. Her quacking voice and braying laugh had first profaned the halls.of F & S on March 7, 1941 (Mr Martin had a head for dates). Old Roberts, the personnel chief, had introduced her as the newly appointed special adviser to the president of the firm, Mr Fitweiler. Tnoj woman had appalled Mr Martin instantly, but he hadn’t' shown it. He had given her his dry hand, a look of studious concentration, and a faint smile. “Well,” she had said, lifting the looking at the papers on his desk, “are you oxcart out of the ditch?” * As Mr Martin recalled that moment, over his milk, he squirmed slightly. He must keep his mind on her crimes as a special adviser, not on her peccadillos as a personality. This he found difficult to do, in spite of entering an objection and sustaining it.* The faults of the woman as a woman kept chattering on in his mind like an unruly witness. She had, for almost two years now, baited him. In the halls, in the elevator, even in his own office, into which she romped now and then like a circus horse, she was constantly shouting these silly questions at him. “Are you lifting the oxcart out of the ditch? Are you tearing up the pea patch? Are you hollering down the rain barrel?* Are you scraping around the bottom of the pickle barrel? Are you sitting in the catbird seat?”* i It was Joey Hart, one of Mr Martin’s two assistants, who had explained what the gibberish meant. “She must be a Dodger fan,”* he had said. “Red Barber * announces 34
the Dodger games over the radio and he uses those expreS-1 pions — picked ’em up down South.” Joey had gone on Io explain one or two. “Tearing up the pea patch” meant going on a rampage; * “sitting in the catbird seat” meant nit l ing pretty, like a batter with three balls and no nt ri kes on him. * Mr Martin dismissed all this with an effort. Il had been annoying, it had driven him near to distrac- tion, but he was too solid a man to be moved to murder • by anything so childish. It was fortunate, he reflected п.ч he passed on to the important charges against Mrs Barrows, that he had stood up under it * so well. He had maintained always an outward appearance of polite tolerance. “Why, I even believe you like the woman," Miss Paird, his other assistant, had once said to him. lie had simply smiled. A gavel rapped in Mr Martin’s mind and the case prop- , er was resumed. Mrs Ulgine Barrows stood charged with willful, blatant, and persistent attempts to destroy the efficiency and system of F & S. It was competent, material, and relevant to review her advent and rise to power. Mr Martin had got the story from Miss Paird, who seemed always able to find things out. According to her, Mrs Barrows had met Mr Fitweiler at a party, where she had rescued him from the embraces of a powerfully built drunken man who had mistaken the president of F & S for a famous retired Middle Western football coach. The aging gentleman had jumped to the conclusion there and then that this was a woman of singular attainments,1 equipped to bring out the best in him and in the firm. A week later he had introduced her into F & S as his special adviser. On that day confusion got its foot in the door. After Miss Tyson, Mr Brundage, and Mr Bartlett had been fired and Mr Munson had taken his hat and stalked out, mailing in his resignation later, old Roberts had been emboldened to speak to Mr Fitweiler. He men- tioned that Mr Munson’s department had been “a little disrupted” and hadn’t they perhaps better resume the old system there? Mr Fitweiler had said certainly not. lie had the greatest faith in Mrs Barrows’ ideas. “They require a little seasoning,* a little seasoning, is all,” lie had added, Mr Roberts had given it up. Mr Martin reviewed in detail all the changes wrought by Mrs Bar- rows. She had begun chipping at the cornices of the 2* 85
firm's edifice and now she was swinging at the foundation stones with a pickaxe. Mr Martin came now, in his summing up, to the after- noon of Monday, November 2, 1942 — just one week ago. On that day, at 3 p. m., Mrs Barrows had bounced into his office. “Boo!” she had yelled. “Are you scraping around the bottom of the pickle barrel?” Mr Martin had looked at her from under his green eyeshade, saying no- thing. She had begun to wander about the office, taking it in with her great, popping eyes. “Do you really need all these filing cabinets?” she had demanded suddenly. Mr Martin’s heart had jumped. “Each of these files,” he had said, keeping his voice even, “plays an indispen- sable part in the system of F & S.” She had brayed at him, “Well, don’t tear up the pea patch!” and gone to the door. From there she had bawled, “But you sure have got a lot of fine scrap in here!” Mr Martin could no longer doubt that the finger was on his beloved department. Her pickaxe was on the upswing, poised for the first blow. It had not come yet; he had received no blue memo * from the enchanted Mr Fitweiler bearing nonsensical instructions deriving from the obscene woman. But there was no doubt in Mr Martin’s mind that one would be forthcoming. He must act quickly. Already a precious week had gone by. Mr Martin stood up in his living room, still holding his milk glass. “Gentlemen of the jury,” he said to himself, “I demand the death penalty for this horrible person.” The next day Mr Martin followed his routine, as usual. He polished his glasses more often and once sharpened an already sharp pencil, but not even Miss Paird noticed. Only once did he catch sight of his victim; she swept past him in the hall with a patronizing “Hi!” At five-thirty he walked home, as usual, and had a glass of milk, as usual. He had never drunk anything stronger in his life — unless you could count ginger ale. The late Sam Schlosser, the S of F & S,* had praised Mr Martin at a staff meeting several years before for his temperate habits. “Our most efficient worker neither drinks nor smokes,” he had said. "The results speak for themselves.” Mr Fitweiler had sat by, nodding approval. Mr Martin was still thinking about that, red-letter day as he walked over to Schrafft’s on Fifth Avenue near 36
Forty-sixth Street. He got there, as he always did, at right o’clock. He finished his dinner and the financial page of the Sun at a quarter to nine, as he always did. 11, was his custom after dinner to take a walk. This time he walked down Fifth Avenue at a casual pace. His gloved hands felt moist and warm, his forehead cold. He trans- ferred the Camels from his overcoat to a jacket pocket, lie wondered, as he did so, if they did not represent an unnecessary note of strain. Mrs Barrows smoked only Luckies.* It was his idea to puff a few puffs on a Camel (after the rubbing-out), stub it out in the ashtray holding her lipstick-stained Luckies, and thus drag a small red herring across the trail.* Perhaps it was not a good idea. Jt would take time. He might even choke, too loudly. Mr Martin had never seen the house on West Twelfth Street where Mrs Barrows lived, but he had a clear enough picture of it. Fortunately, she had bragged to everybody about her ducky * first-floor apartment in the perfectly (I arling three-story red-brick. There would be no doorman <ir other attendants; just the tenants of the second and third floors. As he walked along, Mr Martin realized that he would get there before nine-thirty. He had con- sidered walking north on Fifth Avenue from Schrafft’s to a point from which it would take him until ten o’clock to reach the house. At that hour people were less likely to be coming in or going out. 'But the procedure would have made an awkward loop in the straight thread of his casualness, and he had abandoned it. It was impossible to figure when people would be entering or leaving the house, anyway. There was a great risk at any hour. If he ran into anybody, he would simply have to place the rubbing-out of Ulgine Barrows in the inactive file * forever. The same thing would hold true if there were some- one in her apartment. In that case he would just say that fie had been passing by, recognized her charming house and thought to drop in. It was eighteen minutes after nine when Mr Martin turned into Twelfth Street. A man passed him, and a man and a woman talking. There was no one within fifty paces when he came to the house, halfway down the block. He was up the steps and in the small vestibule in no time, pressing the bell under the card that said “Mrs Ulgine 37
13arrows.” When the clicking in the lock started,* be jumped forward against the door. He got inside fasi, closing the door behind him. A bulb in a lantern hung from the hall ceiling on a chain seemed to give a mon- strously bright light. There was nobody on the stair, which went up ahead of him along the left wall. A door opened down the hall in the wall on the right. He went toward it swiftly, on tiptoe. “Well, for God’s sake, look who’s here!” bawled Mrs Barrows, and her braying laugh rang out like the report of a shotgun. He rushed past her like a football tackle, bumping her. “Hey, quit shoving!” she said, closing the door behind them. They were in her living room, which seemed to Mr Martin to be lighted by a hun- dred lamps. “What’s after you?”she said. “You’re as jumpy as a goat.” He found he was unable to speak. His heart was wheezing in his throat. "I — yes,” he finally brought out. She was jabbering and laughing as she started to help him off with his coat. “No, no,” he said. “I’ll put it here.” He took it off and put it on a chair near the door. “Your hat and gloves, too,’’ she said. “You’re in a lady’s house.” He put his hat on top of the coat. Mrs Barrows seemed larger than he had thought. He kept his gloves on. “I was passing by,” he said. "I recognized — is there anyone here?” She laughed louder than ever. “No,” she said, “we’re all alone. You’re as white as a sheet, you funny man. Whatever has come over you? I’ll mix you a toddy.” She started toward a door across the room. “Scotch-and-soda be all right? But say, you don’t drink, do you?” She turned and gave him her amused look. Mr Martin pulled himself together. “Scotch-and- soda will be all right,” he heard himself say. He could hear her laughing in the kitchen. Mr Martin looked quickly around the living room for » the weapon. He had counted on finding one there. There were andirons and a poker and something in a corner that looked like an Indian club. None of them would do. It couldn’t be that way. He began to pace around. He came to a desk. On it lay a metal paper knife with an ornate handle. Would it be sharp enough? He reached for it and knocked over a small brass jar. Stamps spilled out of it and it fell to the floor with a clatter. "Hey,” Mrs Barrows yelled from the kitchen, “are you tearing up the pea patch?” 38
Mr Martin gave a strange laugh. Picking up the knife, he tried its point against his left wrist. It was blunt. It wouldn’t do. When Mrs Barrows reappeared, carrying two high- balls, Mr Martin, standing there with his gloves on, became acutely conscious of the fantasy he had wrought. Cigarettes in his pocket, a drink prepared for him — it was all too grossly improbable. It was more than that; it was impossible. Somewhere in the back of his mind a vague idea stirred, sprouted. “For heaven’s sake, take off those gloves,” said Mrs Barrows. “I always wear them in the house,” said Mr Martin. The idea began to bloom, strange and wonderful. She put the glasses on a coffee iable in front of a sofa and sat on the sofa. “Come over here, you odd little man,” she said. Mr Martin went over and sat beside her. It was difficult getting a cigarette out of the pack of Camels, but he managed it. She held a match for him, laughing. “Well,” she said, handing him his drink, “this is perfectly marvellous. You with a dri nk and a cigarette.” Mr Martin puffed, not too awkwardly, and took a gulp of the highball. “I drink and smoke all the time,” he said. He clinked his glass against hers. “Here’s nuts to * that old windbag, Fitweiler,” he said, and gulped again. The stuff tasted awful, but he made no grimace. “Really, Mr Martin,” she said, her voice and posture changing, “you are insulting our employer.” Mrs Barrows was now. all special adviser to the president. “I am preparing a bomb,” said Mr Martin, “which will blow the old goat - higher than hell.” He had only had a little of the drink, which was not strong. It couldn’t be that. “Do you take dope or something?” Mrs Barrows asked coldly. “Heroin,” said Mr Martin. “I’ll be coked to the gills * when I bump that old buzzard off.” “Mr Martin!” she shouted, getting to her feet. “That will be all of that.* You must go at! once.” Mr Martin took another swallow of his drink. He' tapped his cigarette out in the ashtray and put the pack of Camels on the coffee table. Then he got up. She stood, glaring at him. He walked over and put on his hat and coat. “Not a word about this,” he said, and laid an index finger against his lips. All Mrs Barrows could bring out , was “Really!” Mr . Martin put his hand on the doorknob. 39
“I’m sitting in the catbird seat,” he said. He stuck his tongue out at her and left. Nobody saw him go. Mr Martin got to his apartment, walking, well before eleven. No one saw him go in. He had two glasses of milk after brushing his teeth, and he felt elated. It wasn’t tipsiness, because he hadn’t been tipsy. Anyway, the walk had worn off all effects of the whiskey. He got in bed and read a magazine for a while. He was asleep before midnight. Mr Marlin got to the office at eight-thirty the next morning, as usual. At a quarter to nine, Ulgine Barrows, who had never before arrived at work before ten, swept into his office. “I’m reporting to Mr Fitweiler now!” she shouted. “If he turns you over to the. police, it’s no more than you deserve!” Mr Martin gave her a look of shocked surprise. “I beg your pardon?” he said. Mrs Barrows snorted and bounced out of the room, leaving Miss Paird and Joey Hart staring after her. “What’s the matter with that old devil now?” asked Miss Paird. “I have no idea,” said Mr Martin, resuming his work. The other two looked at him and then at each other. Miss Paird got up and went out. She walked slowly past the closed door of Mr Fitweiler’s office. Mrs Barrows was yelling inside, but she was not braying. Miss Paird could not hear what the woman was saying. She went back to her desk. Forty-five minutes later, Mrs Barrows left the presi- dent’s office and went into her own, shutting the door. It wasn’t until half an hour later that Mr Fitweiler sent for Mr Martin. The head of the filing department, neat, quiet, attentive, stood in front of the old man’s desk. Mr Fitweiler was pale and nervous. He took his glasses off and twiddled them. He made a small, bruffing sound in his throat. “Martin,” he said, “you have been with us more than twenty years.” “Twenty-two, sir,” said Mr Martin. “In that time,” pursued the president, “your work and your-uh-manner have been exemplary.” “I trust so, sir,” said Mr Martin. “I have understood, Martin,” said Mr Fitweiler, “that you have never taken a drink or smoked.” "That is correct, sir,” said Mr Martin. “Ah, yes.” Mr Fitweiler polished his glasses. “You may describe what you did after leaving the office yesterday, Martin,” 40
lie said. Mr Martin allowed less than a second for his bewildered pause. “Certainly, sir,” he said. “I walked home. Then I went to Schrafft’s for dinner. Afterward I walked home again. I went to bed early, sir, and read n magazine for a while. I was asleep before eleven.” "Ah, yes,” said Mr Fitweiler again. He was silent for a moment, searching for the proper words to say to the head of the filing department. “Mrs Barrows,” he said finally, "Mrs Barrows has worked hard, Martin, very hard. It grieves me to report that she has suffered a severe break- down. It has taken the form of a persecution complex accompanied by distressing hallucinations.” “I am very sorry, sir,” said Mr Martin. “Mrs Barrows is under the delusion,” continued Mr Fitweiler, “that you visited her last evening and behaved yourself in an-uh-unseemly manner.” He raised his hand to silence Mr Martin’s little pained outcry. “It is the nature of these psychological diseases,” Mr Fitweiler said, “to fix upon the least likely and most innocent party as the-uh-source of persecution. These matters are not for the lay mind to grasp, Martin. I've just had my psychiatrist, Dr Fitch, on the phone, lie would not, of course, commit himself, but he made enough generalizations to substantiate my suspicions. I suggested to Mrs Barrows when she had completed her- uh-story to me this morning, that she visit Dr Fitch* for I suspected a condition at once. She flew, I regret to say, into a rage, and demanded-uh-requested that I call you on the carpet.* You may not know, Martin, but- Mrs Barrows had planned a reorganization of your depart- ment — subject to my approval, of course, subject to in у approval. This brought you, rather than anyone else, to her miml — but again that is a phenomenon for Dr Fitch and not for us. So, Martin, I am afraid Mrs Barrows’ usefulness here is at an end.” “I am dreadfully sorry, sir,” said Mr Martin. It was at this point that the door to the office blew open with the suddenness of a gas-main explosion and Mrs Barrows catapulted through it. “Is the little rat denying it?” she screamed. “He can’t get away with that!” Mr Martin got up and moved discreetly to a point beside Mr Fitweiler’s chair. “You drank and smoked at my apartment,” she bawled at Mr Martin, “and you know ill You calleil Mr Fitweiler an old windbag and said you 41ч
hi ed to the J catch her'- I . “If - J were going to blow him up when you got coked to gills on your heroin!” She stopped yelling to < breath and a new glint came into her popping eyes, you weren’t such a drab, ordinary little man,” she said, “I’d think you’d planned it all. Sticking your tongue out, saying you were sitting in the catbird seat, because 1 you thought no one would believe me when I told it!;3 My God, it’s really too perfect!” She brayed loudly and:3 hysterically, and the fury was on her again. She glared аЦ1 Mr Fitweiler. “Can’t you see how he has tricked us, you .; old fool? Can’t you see his little game?” But Mr Fitweiler had been surreptitiously pressing all the buttons under ' the top of his desk and employees of F & S began pouring.^ into the room. “Stockton,” said Mr Fitweiler, “you anti I Fishbein will take Mrs Barrows to her home. Mrs Powell, ’ you will go with them.” Stockton, who had played a little 1 football in high school, blocked Mrs Barrows as she made for Mr Martin. It took him and Fishbein together to force I her out of the door into the hall, crowded with stenog- 1 raphers and office boys. She was still screaming impreca- ' tions at Mr Martin, tangled and contradictory impreca- ] lions. The hubbub finally died out down the corridor. , "I regret that this has happened,” said Mr Fitweiler. 1 “I shall ask you to dismiss it from your mind, Martin.” ч “Yes, sir,” said Mr Martin, anticipating his chief’s “That j will be all” by moving to the door. “I will dismiss it.” 1 He went out and shut the door, and his step was light j and quick in the hall. When he entered his department Л he had slowed down to his customary gait, and he walked j quietly across the room to the W20 file, wearing a look ' of studious concentration. 1 Pi 1
FOR DISCUSSION 1. What are Mr Martin’s reasons for wanting to do away with Mrs Barrows? 2. What details supplied by the author help to reveal the characteristic of these two people? 3. What are Mr Martin’s feelings when he reaches Mrs Bar- row’s apartment house? What does his not having a weapon with him reveal about his character? 4. Why is Mr Martin elated when he goes to bed? Why does ho drink two glasses of milk instead of his usual one? 5. How does Mr Fitweiler interpret Mrs Barrows1 description of Mr Martin’s visit? Why is his interpretation a perfectly natural one? 6. What makes Mrs Barrows’ situation worse as she tries to convince Mr Fitweiler that she is telling the truth? 7. What does the title of the story mean as it applies to Mr Martin? Does it apply to any other character in the story? 8. Why had Mr Fitweiler said “Man is fallible, but Martin isn’t”? 9. Refer to the story for clues that may help to reveal the meaning of the following words. If you are not sure of the meaning of a word, use a dictionary to check your guess. peccadillos — Mrs Barrows had committed peccadillos as a per- sonality as well as crimes as a special adviser, (p. 34) rampage — Going on a rampage was like tearing up a pea patch, (p. 35) blatant — Mrs Barrows’ attempts at destruction were willful, blatant, and persistent, (p. 35) hallucinations — Hallucinations accompanied Mrs Barrows’ breakdown, (p. 41) substantiated — The doctor substantiated Mr Fitweiler’s suspi- cions. (p. 41) surreptitiously — Mr Fitweiler surreptitiously pressed the buttons under his desk. (p. 42) 10. Show how the humour of this story depends greatly on the author’s portrayal of his characters. 11. What other qualities of the author’s style provide humorous effect?
Robert Penn Warren THE UNVEXED ISLES 1 The whisky — the best whisky in Russell Hill— sloshed with unthrifty golden opulence into the third and last of the glasses that stood on the lacquered tray. Pro- fessor Dalrymple, something of the crystal-gazer’s pious abstraction in his regard, watched the spill and whirl 4 of the liquor in the orbit of bright glass. Professor Dal- rymple did not relish whisky, even the best whisky in Russell Hill, which, indeed, he dispensed. But he never entered the warm pantry on a Sunday evening, hearing the competent rustle of the electric refrigerator and the murmur of voices from a farther room, without feeling, as he lifted the decanter, a sense of decorous liberation. .3 It was the same sense of liberation he sometimes felt 44
when, looking at his own fine white hands, he recalled that one visit home and the sight of his brother’s hands lying inert on the tablecloth in the lamplight: burned: by sun, chapped by wind like rotten leather, grained irrevocably with black dirt from the prairie. Sacramentally, the whiskey sloshed into the glass. Bubbles of air streamed upward, and at the surface mi- nutely exploded. Professor Dalrymple set the silver-mounted siphon on the tray beside the silver bucket of ice, picked up the tray, squared his shoulders as he did these days when he detected that unconscious droop, and proceeded through the door, across the dining room, where articles of silver discreetly glimmered in the dimness, across the hall, and into the room where they sat, waiting. “Not the true, the blushing Hippocrene,” * he uttered, and approached the bright fire where they sat, “but ’twill serve.” “It’ll serve all right, Doctor,” Phil Alburt said. “It’s as much of a beaker full of the warm South as I ask, even on as lousy cold a night as tonight.” His voice filled the room with authority, a kind of aimless vitality that seemed to make the fire burn up brighter and the bulbs behind their parchment shades glow with more assurance. “It was snowing again when I came in.” “So that’s what you got out of my English 40,* sir?” the Professor demanded. “Not exactly.” His laughter was like his voice. “Well, Phil, if you didn’t get more than that, nobody did. I’ll wager on that.” “Don’t loiter, George,” Mrs Dalrymple commanded, a tinge of asperity licking along the edge of the pleasantry. “Mr Alburt can wait for his compliment, but I don’t want to wait for my toddy.” “Pardon me, Alice,” he said, and with some formality presented the tray. Looking at the ready tray, she commanded, “Squirt it for me.” Her husband set the tray on the little table, placed his long white thumb with its chalky nail on the siphon lever, and pressed. The liquor swirled, paled in the soft light, rose toward the brim. . “Ice,” she said. ... 45
“On a night like this,” Phil Alburt deplored. “We always take ice back home in Baltimore,”* she said. Professor Dalrymple handed his wife the glass. “No ice for me,” Phil Alburt said, “and not much water.” • “I remember," the Professor said. “No ice. Result of your English visits, I suppose.” “Perhaps,” Phil Alburt said, and laughed the vital, vacant laugh. “Not the only result, I’m sure,” the Professor said, and carried the tray across to him. The young man laid his cigarette on the receptacle beside him, looked up at his host with a smile of affable toleration, and reached for the siphon. “Thank you, sir,” he said. The Professor regarded the head with its dark hair which lay in neat gleaming curly folds as though carved. As the water hissed peremptorily into the glass, the smoke lifted from the idle cigarette on the tray under the Profes- sor’s eyes and swayeil in its delicate substance. The Pro- fessor’s glance rested on the cigarette. It is most singular, he thought, that the tip of that cigarette should be stained with lipstick. The words came through his head with such emphatic clarity and distinctness that, rattling the glasses, he started as though the sentence had been spoken by an unseen observer. “That’s fine. Thank you,” the young man was saying. Professor Dalrymple, with effort, disengaged his eyes from the cigarette to meet the large features turned up at him in the contortion of amiability. The features were large and suddenly naked: the strong lips, the even white teeth unbared, the thrust of the nose, the wide brown eyes in which swam flecks of gold, the heavy eyebrows where hairs arched sleekly out from some vigor at the root. “You’re welcome,” Professor Dalrymple rejoined mechanically, then, aware of his words, flushed. As he turned about and traversed the excessive distance across the blue carpet, he felt that all these objects accumulated around him — table, chair, chair, blue carpet, rug, lamp — were unfamiliar to him, and now for the first time might, if he so chose, be construed in their unique and rich unities. After he had adjusted the tray, with
special care, on the stand, he gave to its obscure design a lingering and analytic regard. Lingering, as if he were a schoolboy unwilling at the last moment to lay aside the book before entering the examination room, or as if his attention to the intricacies of the design might postpone the need to inspect those people whose voices, somewhat remotely, impinged upon him. The liquid was cold and sweetish in his mouth. He set the glass back, anti as he did so discoveretl with some surprise that the muscles of his cheek were warped upward in an attentive smile. He might have caught sight of him- self in a random mirror, so surely did he see, not feel, the thin, long, oversensitive lips lift and recede beneath the accurate line of black bristle in the ambassadorial mustache. I am making a great fool of myself, he reflected, grinning like that. / Alice Dalrymple had just said, “I guess old Prexy would turn over in his truckle bed if he knew we were plying one of bis charges with toddy.” Professor Dalrymple, yet smiling, cleared his throat slightly. “You know, Phil, we are not able to follow the dictates of hospitality as a general thing. Offering refresh- ment to our undergraduates is, as a general thing, shall I say, tabu. But I feel, we feel, that we are at liberty to do so in certain cases where the undergraduate’s back- ground is more liberal — when the undergraduate is more mature, more, shall I say, a man of the world.” The words — slipped precisely over his lips, and he was aware, at their conclusion, of the lips still warped upward in the smile. He was aware of having uttered the words at somo time in the past, of some quality and inflection that implied rehearsal. But as he said, “A man of the world," he did not experience that feeling of inner security and relish which customarily was his on like occasions. Phil Alburt lolled in dark well-tailored mass behind a glass, a look of bland inattention on his features. When he spoke, it was, likewise, with an accent of rehearsal. “I must say I’m mature enough to appreciate the quality of this hospitality,” he said, and significantly fingered the glass. Professor Dalrymple thought, A man of the world. He slipped the phrase about in his mind as a child sucks candy, but the words were hard and savorless like marbles. -.47
Quite suddenly it occurred to him that the young man opposite, who nodded his head in amused approbation at some remark from the pretty woman, fancied himself as a man of the world. Because he is rich, it occurred to him, because he lives in New York and wears tailor-made clothes and goes to Europe and drinks whisky, and, in fact, has kissed Alice Bogan Dalrymple in my house, he fancies himself a man of the world. I was born in Nebraska * in a house that stood on the bare ground with no trees. Then with a feeling of distant fatality, his sense of warmth •for Phil Alburt, somewhat modified but real enough, came back within him. In all perversity, it came back. Alice Dalrymple gave her gaze to the fire, where flames scrolled ornamentally upward to the black chimney throat. The brass dogs gleamed, the hearth was swept to a sharp border, the flames sprouted upward like flowers from an accurate parterre. She turns her head so, Professor Dalrymple observed, because she knows she looks best in profile. She is thinner these days, she looks tired. Alice Dalrymple held her head at right angles to the young man’s chair: her profile was clean and delicate, with a careful dyspeptic * beauty. The young man himself was looking into the fire. “So you are leaving Tuesday?” she said. “Tuesday,” Phil Alburt said with the air of one gently engrossed in the collaboration of fireside and toddy. “Tuesday, and I get home the next night just in time to hang up my stocking.” * “And up early next morning,” Professor Dalrymple said, “to sec your new velocipede.” “Not to see my new velocipede, to take some Mother Sill’s.* You see, I’ve got to hang my stocking up over the wash basin on a boat to Bermuda.* Mother is dragging me off down there.” Mrs Dalrymple laughed, a quick accurate modulation. “And Old Santy * comes down the hot water pipe and fills it with little guest cakes of Palmolive * and Dr West toothbrushes.” She laughed. “Instead of ashes and switches.” “I won’t care if it’s full of horsewhips, I’ll be feeling so bad that first morning. I’m a rotten sailor.” “Not horsewhips for a good little boy,” Professor Dal- rymple echoed, and, quite unexpectedly, laughed too. .48
“I’ve been planning to go East,” Mrs Dalrymple said in a tone of mild frustration. “To Baltimore.” “Home?” Phil Alburt said. Home, Professor Dalrymple thought, Mrs George Dalrymple lives in Russell Hill in Illinois. He tabulated the items of her address in his mind. Mrs George Dal- rymple, 429 Poplar Street, Russell Hill, Illinois, U. S. A. “But George here can’t go,” she said, “and I’m going to be sweet and dutiful and stay right here. ” “You ought to go, Alice,” Professor Dalrymple said. And he said to himself, She can't go because she can't buy a ticket on a train to Baltimore. Because she married a poor man. “George, you see, wants to finish up some research this vacation. He gets so little time during the year.” “What is it, Doctor?” “Just a little Chaucer * note I’ve been working on,” the Professor answered, and thought for a minute that he might, after all, write a paper. Satisfaction and meaning filled him and velleities slipped away as he lifted his glass to his lips. “So I’ll stay here with him, a martyr to the noble cause of scholarship.” “A mild martyrdom, I would call it, to sit with my heels on the fender,” the young man said. “We used to have some pretty good Christmases in Baltimore, didn’t we?” Mrs Dalrymple gave her husband a full intimate glance, and he noted how the flesh dropped thinly away from the base of her nostrils. “I believe Father made the best eggnog I ever tasted. Everybody used to come in for eggnog on Christmas. Everybody. You ought to let your old research go hang * this Christmas, George — ” “Yes, indeed,” her husband said. He was conscious of the rhythm of forgotten voices, forgotten excitements, like the sea sound in empty whorls of a shell. Old Mr Bogan’s voice saying, “Gentlemen, gentlemen.” Old Mrs Bogan’s voice with the shrillness all drained away in time. Form of voices with no sound. “— but instead we’ll just sit this Christmas.” Eggs. Dozens of eggs. Baskets of eggs. Whisky, sweet- ish and gold. Hams. Arrogant turkeys. Wine. A steaming mess heaped and poured on the altar of Lucile Bogan’s 49
and Alice Bogan’s need for a man to share the bed and pay the bills. A steaming, sweating altar, while smoke ascended from twenty-five cent cigars. Ah, he thought, and old Mr Bogan’s ritualistic white shirt front obtruded, a-glitter * with starch and studs, in the midst of his fancy. Ah, they spent a lot of money and the best they got was me. But that was when Alice wrote her little verses for the Junior League magazine and showed an English pro- fessor to her friends. Then he concluded with a flat feeling in his head like a run-down clock: She would know better now. “Well,” Phil Alburt said, “just sitting has .its points. I’m going to do a good deal of sitting myself this vacation. Taking my little school satchel along.” “To Bermuda,” Professor Dalrymple said, dryly he hoped, and realized on the instant that he hated Phil Alburt, not because lipstick stained a dead cigarette butt in the ash tray across the hearth, but because Phil Alburt had said those precise words in that precise accent of com- fort. “To Bermuda,” Phil Alburt agreed, and laughed without embarrassment. Mrs Dalrymple laughed, again the quick accurate modulation. Iler husband stonily inspected her mirth: She has no more self-respect than to laugh after what he just said to her. When she laughs now she holds her head up so the skin won't sag in her neck. Craning her neck like that, she looks like a cigarette advertisement. He looked guiltily across at the tray by Phil Alburt, as if it were necessary to assure himself that the dead butt reposed there in its matrix of ash. “However, I can’t just sit any more right now,” the young man said. “I’ve got to go now and do a little work before bedtim?. I just came to say good-bye.” He stood in front of his chair, not really tall but erect, broad shoul- ders appearing broader by the cut of his coat, his hair with a dark waxen gleam in the light, the double-breasted coat buttoned sleek and flat over his hips and belly. Professor Dalrymple rose. “Must you go,” Mrs Dalrymple asked, and likewise stood. “Must,” he said. “Off to the happy isles,” Professor-Dalrymple said cheerfully. Then: “I’m thinking about a trip myself.
J think I’ll go home this Christmas.” With a certain pleas- ure he noted his wife’s faint movement of surprise — or was it annoyance? "Fine,” Phil Alburt said. “You see,” he continued, “I haven’t been home in <i long time. Not for nine years. I was born and reared out in Nebraska.” “On a ranch, I bet,” the young man said hopefully. “No. On a dirt farm, that’s what they call them. Near a place named Sinking Fork Station. Just a wheat elevator and a siding. Did you ever hear of the place?” Phil Alburt looked quickly at Mrs Dalrymple, a glance of appeal for support or enlightenment. Then he managed a smile. “I can’t say that I have,” he said. “1 didn’t really imagine that you had. My brother out there is still running the farm, I believe, unless they have foreclosed his various mortgages.” “Recent times have been difficult for the agriculturist,” Phil Alburt said, somehow with a touch of piety. “Indeed,” Professor Dalrymple said, an ambiguous inflection to the word which he himself, for the flicker of an instant, tried in his mind to decipher. But he could scarcely decide what he had intended. He stood passively while his guest, a perturbed peevish light in his brown eyes, hesitated before taking comfort in the circumstance of farewell. Phil Alburt and Mrs Dalrymple said good- bye. Good-bye and Merry Christmas. In the hall, while he held Phil Alburt’s coat, he felt like a fool. At the door, he shook, cordially as one trying to make amends, the hand offered him, refrained from looking al the face of the parting guest for fear he might find a smile on it, and said, several times, “Good-bye”. After Phil Alburt had gone down the steps, he yet stood in the open doorway, while the cold wind blew down the street and a few small flakes whipped past, and watched the figure proceed the length of the walk and climb into an automobile. He called once, “Merry Christmas,” but his voice, he knew immediately, was lost in the easy, vicious whir of gears. The wind which blew down the street tossed the deco- rative conifers by the walk so that they looked like two old women in tattered black shawls begging at his door- step. He straightened his shoulders and experienced again, 51
though hut faintly, the accustomed sense of Sunday night complacency. Then his wife called, “Shut the door!” He knew exactly how she would be when he entered the room. She would be standing before the fireplace, very still, as though spent by agitations of the evening; the black chiffon, in contrast to pale skin and pale hair, would hang to her slender figure with that extravagant flimsiness which once had made him suspect that a dress was borrowed for the occasion; and her breasts defined but flattish, would lift, then decline, in a movement of disturbing finicky respiration. He closed the heavy door, took three paces down the hall, and entered the room. There she stood. “I think, Alice,” he announced with a premonitory clearing of the throat, “I think that I shall do that paper. The subject has never been approached from precisely —” She fixed her eyes on him; said, “What paper?... Oh, of course”; and relapsed into her stillness. The cigarette which hung, almost artificially, from her thin nervous fingers surrendered its trail of smoke to the air. As he approached her across the carpet, warily as though he trod a treacherous surface on which he might slip and lose dignity, desire, an irritable but profound desire, took him. “Alice,” he said, unsure of what words were to follow. She again looked at him. “You were very rude to Phil,” she said. “Rude?” he echoed. “What ever made you so rude to him?” Her voice was the voice of dutiful catechism. He almost said: “Under the circumstances I had a right to be rude to him”; but did not. Then he thought: She is angry because I said what I did to that fool. She doesn’t believe I am really going home. I am going home. “What made you so rude?” she patiently demanded. He was conscious of a small kernel of blind, blank rage deep in him. Its tentacles dumbly, blindly, groped within him. “I never saw you act like that before.” “If I was rude to Mr Alburt, I am sorry.” He framed his words with care. “I assure you that my intentions were of the kindest.” 52
The desire came back, profound and dangerous, but lie preserved from it a strange detachment. He felt like n inaii about to pick a scab: that perverse curiosity, that impulse to view the object, to test his own pain. “Alice,” lie said, hearing the syllables distantly, and put his arm round her shoulders. His kiss did not reach her mouth; ho felt the bristles of his mustache press into the yielding flesh of her cheek. He did not know whether she had disengaged herself, or whether, in fact, his arm had simply fallen from her shoulders. There she stood, and she lifted one hand, palm against the temple, in that fatalistic gesture which now, ns ever, filled him with a sense of insufficiency. “I am very tired,” she said. “Yes,” he agreed, “you look tired.” And he felt with gratification that by not having said a moment before, “1 love you,” he had maintained his self-respect. “Good night,” she said. She withdrew from him, past the chair where she had sat that evening, past the table where his own drained glass stood, and toward the door. With her movement the black chiffon fluttered and waggled. He looked at the door through which she had just passed. Words took form in his mind with such special satisfaction that he was tempted to speak them aloud. 1 would be doing my friend, Mr Alburt, a favor if I should tell him that Alice Dalrymple is cold as a snake. Then, as he surveyed the room, whose articles, now that she had gone, seemed out of focus, he could not help but wonder what she would have said, how she would have taken it, if, after all, he had said, “I love you”. He drifted toward the hall door, and out into the hall. Somewhere on the upper floor a light burned, splaying shadow and angular patches of illumination into the lower section like a gigantic, ghostly pack of cards. Without looking up, he passed down the hall to. his study door, opened it, and threw the electric switch. The big bronze lamp on the desk in the center of the room released its steady flooding light over the appointed objects: over the tray of pens which lay in meticulous intimacy side by side, the bronze inkstand, the leather spectacle case. In shad- ow, just beyond the rim of light, the books, tier on tier, mounted like masonry of some blank, eyeless structure. 53
He seated himself before the desk; removed the spec- tacles from the case; dutifully wiped them with a white handkerchief; hooked them over his ears. He opened the -i| book in front of him. He was scarcely aware that he had я performed that set of actions, so habitual to him; it was, ‘4 indeed, with a subdued surprise that to him came recogni- da tion of the words on the printed page. It was as if, on relax- ing his attention at the end of each sentence, he should :l say, “Well, well, here I am.” He tried to follow the words that marched cleanly J from margin to margin, line by line; but the faces per- sistently came. He perceived Phil Alburt’s naked face . set in the rich flaring fur of an overcoat collar, and beyond it another face, undefined, unknown, anonymous, the ~ face of a girl whose body, reclining, was lapped in silk and fur: faces fixed above the dash lamp * and the little 4 white unwinking dials that said all was well, all was 3 well, while the bold-flung beams of headlights ripped Ч the snowy road and the dark that whirled toward tho- " faces. Between the words on the page, between the sentences, he saw the faces appear and reappear as between the spokes of a slowly revolving wheel. Necking, he thought, « out necking. He suddenly discovered as though he had ’ been searching for it, that word he had heard the students J use. And he is going to Bermuda, he thought, and into | his mind crowded the pictures he had seen in travel adver- J tiseinents, the man and woman on horseback, in bright coats, riding along the white beach by blue water. To ’ Bermuda, he thought, but I am going home. Even if Alice doesn't believe me, I am going home. That satisfied him and he felt, somehow surprised at his emotion, a deep homesickness. He tried to comprehend the words on the page, but his mind, like nervous fingers, dropped them. Whilo the wind sweeping down the great valley of the Missi- ssippi beat the town, beat the house, and hurled tho sparse lost flakes through the upper reaches of darkness, he sat in the ring of steady light from the bronze lamp on his desk. At length before he possessed the calm, suf- ficient meaning of the words under his eye, he knew that he would slay here forever in Russell Hill, Illinois, at LIiIh nnd| pretentious little college on the plain, in this M r . 1 - .
house with the rustling electric refrigerator and the tiers of books; that this Christmas, or any other, he would not. go home; that the woman now sleeping upstairs where I ho single light burned was perfectly his own; and that I'hil Alburt, who had, really, nothing to do with them, with George Dalrymple and Alice Bogan Dalrymple, would ride away, forever, on horseback, his naked face tuniling as he rode down the white beaches beside the blue water of the unvexed isles. ГОП DISCUSSION 1. Discuss what you feel to he the most important element of tliis story — plot, character or setting. Give reasons for your answer with evidence from the story. 2. Professor Dalrymple feels “a sense of decorous liberation” al the beginning of the story. How would you describe his feelings al the end? 3. Why is a glow of security Professor Dalrymple felt vanishing gradually up to the end of the story? 4. What contribution does the concluding paragraph make to your understanding of Professor Dalrymple’s character? 5. What is your final opinion of Professor Dalrymple? Do you feel any trace of sympathy lor him? 6. What gives Phil Alburt his aimless vitality, his voice of authority, in the presence of Dalrymple? His mere youth? His greater wealth? Something less tangible? 7. Is Alice Dalrymple as disenchanted with her husband as he is with her? Comment on the details given in the story which suggest their attitudes toward each other. 8. What devices does the author use to reveal the charac- ters of Professor Dalrymple and his wife? 9. Discuss whether the story is strengthened by the element of contrast. 10. Warren’s title is an irony in itself. In Shakespeare’s The Tempest the Bermudas were referred teas “still-vex’d” (i. e., always stormy). Why does Warren, then, call them “unvexed”? To whom are they always calm? Dalrymple? Phil Alburt?
IL E. Bates A CHRISTMAS SONG She gave lessons in voice-training in the long room above the music shop. Her pupils won many examina- tions and were afterwards very successful at local concerts and sometimes in giving lessons in voice-training to other pupils. She herself had won many examinations and everybody said how brilliant she was. Every Christmas, as this year, she longed for snow. It gave a transfiguring gay distinction to a town that otherwise had none. It lifted up the squat * little shops, built of red brick with upper storeys of terra-cotta; it made the roofs down the hill like glistening cakes; it even gave importance to the stuffy gauze-windowed club where local gentlemen played billiards and solo whist * 56'
over meagre portions of watered whisky. One could imag- ine, with the snow, that one was in Bavaria or Vienna or the Oberland,* and that horse-drawn sleighs, of which she read in travel guides, would glide gracefully down I ho ugly hill from the gasworks. One could imagine Evensford, with its many hilly little streets above the river, a little Alpine town. One could imagine anything. Instead there was almost always rain and long columns of working-class mackintoshes floating down a street that was like a dreary black canal. Instead of singing Mozart * to the show she spent long hours selling jazz sheet music to factory workers and earned her reward, at last, on Christmas Eve, by being bored at the Wil- liamsons' party. Last year she had sung several songs at the William- sons’ party. Some of the men, who were getting hearty on mixtures of gin and port wine, had applauded in the wrong places, and Freddy Williamson had bawled out "Good old Clara!” She knew the men preferred Effie. Her sister was a very gay person although she did not sing; she had never passed an examination in her life, but there was, in a strange way, hardly anything you felt she could not do. She had a character like a chameleon; she had all the love affairs. She laughed a great deal, in rippling infec- tious scales, so that she made other people begin laugh- ing, and she had large violet-blue eyes. Sometimes she laughed so much that Clara herself would begin weep- ing. This year Clara was not going to the Williamsons’ party; she had made up her mind. The Williamsons were in leather; * they were very successful and had a large early Edwardian * house with bay-windows and corner cupolas and bathroom windows of stained glass over- looking the river. They were fond of giving parlies several times a year. Men who moved only in Rotarian * or golf circles turned up with wives whose corset suspend- ers could be seen like bulging pimples under sleek dress- es. About midnight Mrs Williamson grew rowdy and began rushing from room to room making love to other men. The two Williamson boys, George and Freddy, became rowdy too, and took off their jackets and did muscular and noisy gymnastics with the furniture. 1 57
At four o’clock she went upstairs to close the windows of the music room and pull the curtains and make up the fire. It was raining in misty delicate drops and the air was not like Christmas. In the garden there were lime trees and their dark red branches, washed with rain, were like glowing veins in the deep blue air. As she was coming out of the room her sister came upstairs. “Oh! there you are. There’s a young man downstairs who wants a song and doesn’t know the name.” “It’s probably a Danny Kaye. * It always is.” “No it isn’t. He says it’s a Christmas song.” “I’ll come,” she said. Then half-way downstairs she stopped; she remembered what it was she was going to say to Effie. “By the way, I’m not coming to the party,” she said. “Oh! Clara, you promised. You always come.” “I know; but I’m tired, and I don’t feel like coming and there it is.” “The Williamsons will never let you get away with it,” her sister said. “They’ll drag you by force.” “I’ll see about this song,” she said. “What did he say it was?” “He says it’s a Christmas song. You’ll never get away with it. They’ll never let you.” She went down into the shop. Every day people came into the shop for songs whose names they did not know. “It goes like this,” they would say, “or it goes like that.” They would try humming a few notes and she would take it up* from them; it was always something popular, and in the end, with practice, it was never very difficult. A young man in a brown overcoat with a brown felt hat and an umbrella stood by the sheet-music counter. He took off his hat when she came up to him. “There was a song I wanted —” “A carol?” she said. “No, a song,” he said. “A Christmas song.” He was very nervous and kept rolling the ferrule of the umbrella on the floor linoleum. He wetted his lips and would not look at her. “If you could remember the words?” . “I’m afraid I can’t.” “How does it go? Would you know that?" . 58/
He opened his mouth either as if to begin singing a few notes or to say something. But nothing happened and he began biting his lip instead. “If you could remember a word or two,” she said. “Is it a new song?” “You see, I think it’s German,” he said. “Oh,” she said. “Perhaps it’s by Schubert?” * “It sounds awfully silly, but I simply don’t know. We only heard it once,” he said. He seemed about to put on his hat. He ground the ferrule of the umbrella into the linoleum. Sometimes it happened that people were too shy even to hum the notes of the song they wanted, and suddenly she said: “Would you care to come upstairs? We might find it there.” Upstairs in the music room she sang the first bars of one or two songs by Schubert. She sat at the piano and he stood respectfully at a distance, leaning on tho um- brella, too shy to interrupt her. She sang a song by Brahms * and he listened hopefully. She asked him if these were the songs, but he shook his head, and finally, after she had sung another song by Schubert, he blurted out: “You. see, it isn’t actually a Christmas song. It is, and it isn’t. It’s more that it makes you think of Christ- mas —” "Is it a love song?” “Yes.” She sang another song by Schubert; but it was not the one he wanted; and at last sho stood up. “You see, there are so many love songs —” “Yes, I know, but this one is rather different somehow.” “Couldn’t you bring her in?” she said. “Perhaps she would remember?” “Oh! no,” he said. “I wanted to find it without that.” They went downstairs and several times on the way down he thanked her for singing. “You sing beautifully,” he said. "You would have liked this song.” “Come in again if you think of it,” she said. “If you can only think of two or three bars.” Nervously he fumbled with the umbrella and then quickly put on his hat and then as quickly took it off again. He thanked her for being so kind, raising his bat 59
a second time. Outside the shop he put up the umbrella too sharply, and a breeze, catching it, twisted him on the bright pavement and bore him out of sight. Rain fell gently all evening and customers came in and shook wet hats on bright pianos. She walked about trying to think of the song the young man wanted. Songs by Schubert went through her head and became mixed with the sound of carol from gramophone cubicles and she was glad when the shop had closed. Effie began racing about in her underclothes, getting ready for the party. “Clara, you can’t mean it that you’re not coming.” “I do mean it. I’m always bored and they really don't want me.” “They love you.” “I can’t help it. I made up my mind last year. I never enjoy it, and they’ll be better without me.” “They won’t let you get away with it,” Effie said. “I warn you they'll come and fetch you.” At eight o’clock her father and mother drove off with Effie in the Ford. She went down through the shop and unbolted the front door and let them out into the street. “The stars are shining,” her mother said. “It’s getting colder.” She stood for a second or two in the doorway, looking up at the stars and thinking that per- haps, after all, there was a touch of frost in the air. “Get ready!” Effie called from the car. “You know what the Williamsons are!” and laughed with high infec- tious scales so that her mother and father began laughing too. After the car had driven away she bolted the door and switched off the front shop bell. She went upstairs and put on her dressing-gown and tried to think once again of the song the young man had wanted. She played over several songs on the piano, singing them softly. At nine o’clock something was thrown against the sidestreet window and she heard Freddy Williamson bawling: “Who isn’t coming to the party? Open the window.” She went to the window and pulled back the curtain and stood looking down. Freddy Williamson stood in the street below and threw his driving gloves at her. “Get dressed! Come on!” 60
She opened the window. •‘Freddy, be quiet. People can hear.” “I want them to hear. Who isn’t coming to whose parly? I want them to hear.” lie threw the driving gloves up at the window again. “Everybody is insulted!” he said. “Come on.” “Please,” she said. "Let me in then!” he bawled. “Let me come up and talk to you.” “All right,” she said. She went downstairs and let him in through the shop and he came up to the music room, shivering, stamping enormous feet. “Getting colder,” he kept saying. “Getting colder.” “You should put on an overcoat,” she said. “Never wear one,” he said. “Can’t bear to be stuffed up.” “Then don’t grumble because you’re starved to death.” He stamped up and down the room, a square-boned young man with enormous lips and pink flesh and small poodle-like eyes, pausing now and then to rub his hands lie fore the fire. “The Mater sends orders you’re to come back with me,” he said, “and she absolutely won’t take no for an answer.” “I’m not coming,” she said. "Of course you’re coming! I’ll have a drink while you gel ready.” “I’ll pour you a drink,” she said, “but I’m not coming. What will you have?” “Gin,” he said. “Clara, sometimes you’re the most awful bind.” * She poured the drink, not answering. Freddy William- son lifted the glass and said: “Sorry, didn’t mean that. Happy Christmas. Good old Clara.” “Happy Christmas,” she said. “Good old Clara. Come on, let’s have one for Christ- mas.” Freddy Williamson put clumsy hands across her shoulders, kissing her with lips rather like those of a heavy wet dog. “Good old Clara,” he said again. “Good old girl.” 61
Songs kept crossing and recrossing her mind, bewil- dering her into moments of dreamy distraction. She had the feeling of trying to grasp something that was floating away. “Don’t stand there like a dream,” Freddy Williamson said. “Put some clothes on. Come on.” “I’m going to tie up Christmas presents and go to bed.” “Oh! Come on, Clara, come on. Millions of chaps are there Availing.” She stood dreamily in the centre of the room, thinking of the ardent shy young man who could not remember the song. “You’re such a dream,” Freddy Williamson said. “You just stand there. You’ve got to snap out of yourself.” Suddenly he pressed himself against her in attitudes of muscular, heavier love, grasping her about the waist, partly lifting her from the floor, his lips wet on her face. "Come on, Clara,” he kept saying, “let the blinds up. Can’t keep the blinds down for ever.” “Is it a big party?” “Come on, let the blinds up,” he said. “How can I come to the party if you keep holding me here?” “Let the blinds up and come to the party too,” he said. “Eh?” “No,” she said. “Well, one more kiss,” ho said. He smacked at her lips with his heavy dog-like mouth, pressing her body backwards. “Good old Clara. All you got to do is let yourself go. Come on — let the blinds up. Good old Clara.” “All right. Let me get my things on,” she said. “Get yourself another drink while you’re waiting.” “Fair enough. Good old Clara.” While she went away to dress he drank gin and stumped about the room. She came back in her black coat with a black and crimson scarf on her head and Freddy Williamson said: “Whizzo.* That’s better. Good old Clara,” and kissed her again, running clumsy * ruffling hands over her face and neck and hair. When they went downstairs someone was tapping lightly on the glass of the street door. “Police for the car,” Freddy. Williamson said. “No lights or some damn thing,” (52
but when she opened the door it was the young man who could not remember the song. He stood there already raising his hat: “I’m terribly sorry. Ohl you’re going out. Excuse me.” “Did you remember it?” she said. “Some of it,” he said. “The words.” “Come in a moment,” she said. He came in from the street and she shut the door. It was dark in the shop, and he did not seem so nervous. I lo began to say: “It goes rather like this — I can’t remem- ber it all. But something like this — Leise jlehen meine Lieder — Liebchen, komm zu mir —” “It is by Schubert,” she said. She went across the shop and sat down at one of the pianos and began to sing it for him. She heard him say, “That’s it. That’s the one,” and Freddy Williamson fid- geted with the latch of the shop door as he kept one hand on it, impatient to go. “It’s very beautiful,” the young man said. “It’s not a Christmas song, but somehow —” Freddy Williamson stamped noisily into the street, and a second or two later she heard him start up the car. The door-catch rattled where he had left it open and a cur- rent of cold air blew into the dark shop. She had broken off her singing because, after the first verse, she could not remember the words. Softly plead my songs — Loved one, come to me — she was not sure how it went after that. “I’m sorry I can’t remember the rest,” she said. “It’s very kind of you,” he said. The door irritated her by banging on its catch. She went over and shut it and out in the street Freddy Williamson blew impatiently on the horn of the car. “Was it the record you wanted?” she said. “There is a very good one —” “If it’s not too much trouble.” "I think I can find it,” she said. “I’ll put on the light.” As she looked for the record and found it, she sang the first few bars of it again. “There is great tenderness in it,” ; she began to say. “Such a wonderful tenderness,” but suddenly it seemed as if the young man was embarrassed. 63 т
He began fumbling in his pocket-book for his money, , but she said, “Oh! no. Pay after Christmas. Pay any time,” and at the same moment Freddy Williamson opened the door of the shop and said: “What goes on? After hours, after hours. Come on.” “I’m just coming,” she said. “I’ll say good night,” the young man said. “I’m very grateful. I wish you a Happy Christmas.” “Happy Christmas,” she said. Outside the stars were green and sharp in a sky with- out wind; the street had dried except for dark prints of frost on pavements. “Damn cool,” Freddy Williamson kept saying. “Damn cool.” He drove rather fast, silent and a little sulky, out towards the high ground overlooking the river. Rain had been falling everywhere through all the first weeks of December and now as the car came out on the valley edge she could see below her a great pattern of winter flood water, the hedgerows cutting it into rectangular lakes glittering with green and yellow lights from towns on the far side. “I’d have told him to go to hell,” Freddy Williamson said. “I call it damn cool. Damn cool.” “See the floods,” she said. “There’ll be skating.” “The damn cheek people have,” Freddy Williamson said. “Damn cheek.” He drove the car with sulky abandon into the gravel drive of the big Edwardian house. Dead chestnut leaves swished away on all sides, harsh and brittle, and she could see frost white on the edges of the big lawn. "One before we go in,” Freddy Williamson said. She turned away her mouth but he caught it with clumsy haste, like a dog seizing a bird. “Good old Clara. Let the blinds up. It’s Christmas Eve.” “Put the car away and I’ll wait for you,” she said. “Fair enough,” he said. “Anything you say. Good old Clara. Damn glad you came.” She got out of the car and stood for a few moments looking down the valley. She bent down and put her hands on the grass. Frost was crisp and hard already, and she could see it sparkling brightly on tree branches
and on rain soaked stems of dead flowers. It made her breath glisten in the house-lights coming across the lawn. Il seemed to be glittering even on the long wide flood wa- lers, so that she almost persuaded herself the valley was one great river of ice already, wonderfully trans- loniiedt Standing there, she thought of the young man, with his shy ardent manner, his umbrella and his raised hat. The song he had not been able to remember began to go through her head again — Softly plead my songs — Loved tme, come to me — ; but at that moment Freddy William- son came blundering up the drive and seized her once again like a hungry dog. “One before we go in,” he said. “Come on. Good old Clara. One before we go in. Good show.” Shrieks of laughter came suddenly from the house as if someone, perhaps her sister, had ignited little fires of merriment that were crackling at the windows. “Getting worked up!” Freddy Williamson said. “Going to be good!” She felt the frost crackling under her feet. She grasped nt something that, was floating away. Leise flehen meine Lieder — Oh! my loved one — how did it go? I'OR DISCUSSION 1. Is the locus of the story on the plot or on the mood? 2. How would you characterize the mood of the story? Which details create this mood? Is it the content, the form of expression, or both? 3. Does the author succeed in keeping to this mood up to the end of the story? What have choice of diction, sentence construction and the arrangement of the parts of the narrative to do with this? 3 II. В. Ступников 65
What is the meaning of the contrast between, the two sis- What is the setting of this story? Why are the time and the important to the plot? How does the imaginary picture of the town in snow con- 4., The author s choice of- characters also helps to establish and keep up the mood. Which character is the most important in this regard? What qualities of the personality have this effect? What other characters in the story help to support the mood? How? 5. teas? 6. place so ' 7. tribute to the general mood of the story? 8. What is tho function of music in the story? 9. Is the theme of Schubert’s song pertinent to the subject of/ the story? In what way? 10. Explain what the author gains or loses by ending the story where he does.
Eudora Welty DEATH OF A TRAVELING SALESMAN R. J. Bowman, who for fourteen years had traveled for a shoe company through Mississippi, drove his Ford along a rutted dirt path. It was a long day! The time did not seem to clear the noon hurdle and settle into soft afternoon. The sun, keeping its strength here even in winter, stayed at the top of the sky, and every time Bowman stuck his head out of the dusty car to stare up the road, it seemed to reach a long arm, down and push against the top of his head, right through his hat — like the practical joke of an old drummer, long on the road. It made him feel all the more angry and help- less. He was feverish, and he was not quite sure of the way. 3- 67
This was his first day back on the road after a long siege of influenza. He had had very high fever, and dreams, and had become weakened and pale, enough to tell the difference in the mirror, and he could not think clear- ly... All afternoon, in the midst of his anger, and for no reason, he had thought of his dead grandmother. She had been a comfortable soul. Once more Bowman wished he could fall into the big feather bed that had been in her room... Then he forgot her again. This desolate hill country! And he seemed to be going the wrong way — it was as if he were going back, far back. There was not a house in sight... There was no use wishing he were back in bed, though. By paying the hotel doctor his bill he had proved his recovery. He had not even been sorry when the pretty trained nurse said good- bye. He did not like illness, he distrusted it, as he distrust- ed the road without signposts. It angered him. He had given the nurse a really expensive bracelet, just because she was packing up her bag and leaving. But now — what if in fourteen years on the road he had never been ill before and never had an accident? His record was broken, and he had even begun almost to question it... He had gradually put up at better hotels, in the bigger towns, but weren’t they all, eternally, stuffy in summer and drafty in winter? Women? He could only remember little rooms within little rooms, like a nest of Chinese paper boxes, and if he thought of one woman he saw the worn loneliness that the furniture of that room seemed built of. And he himself — he was a man who always wore rather wide-brimmed black hats, and in the wavy hotel mirrors had looked something like a bull- fighter, as he paused for that inevitable instant on the landing, walking downstairs to supper... He leaned out of the car again, and once more the sun pushed at his head. Bowman had wanted to reach Beulah by dark, to go to bed and sleep off his fatigue. As he remembered, Beu- lah was fifty miles away from the last town, on a graveled road. This was only a cow trail, flow had he ever come to such a place? One hand wiped the sweat from his face, and he drove on. He had made the Beulah trip before. But he had never seen this hill or this petering-out path before — or that 68
cloud, he thought shyly, looking up and then down quick- ly — any more than he had seen this day before. Why did he not admit he was simply lost and had been for miles?... He was not in the habit of asking the way of strangers, and these people never knew where the very loads they lived on went to; but then he had not been close enough to anyone to call out. People standing in the fields now and then, or on the top of the haystacks, had been too far away, looking like leaning sticks or weeds, turning a little at the solitary rattle of his car across their countryside, watching the pale sobered winter dust where it chunked out behind like big squashes down I he road. The stares of these distant people had followed him solidly like a wall, impenetrable, behind which they turned back after he had passed. The cloud floated there to one side like the bolster on his grandmother’s bed. It went over a cabin on the edge of a hill, where two bare chinaberry trees * clutched nt the sky. He drove through a heap of dead oak leaves, his wheels stirring their weightless sides to make a silvery melancholy whistle as the car passed through their bed. No car had been along this way ahead of him Then he snw that he was on the edge of a ravine that fell away, n red erosion, and that this was indeed the road’s end. He pulled the brake. But it did not hold, though he put all his strength into it. The car, tipped toward the edge, rolled a little. Without doubt, it was going over the bank. lie got out quietly, as though some mischief had been done him and he had his dignity to remember. He lifted his bag and sample case out, set them down, and stood back and watched the car roll over the edge. He heard something — not the crash he was listening for, but a slow, unuproarious crackle. Rather distastefully he went to look over, and he saw that his car had fallen into a tangle of immense grapevines as thick as his arm, which caught it and held it, rocked it like a grotesque child in a dark cradle, and then, as he watched, con- cerned somehow that he was not still inside it, released it gently to the ground. He sighed. Where am I? he wondered with a shock. Why didn’t I do something? All his anger seemed to have drifted 69
away from him. There was the house, back on the hill. j He took a bag in each hand and with almost childlike willingness went" toward it. But his breathing came with difficulty, and he had to stop to rest. It was a shotgun house,* two rooms and an open pas- I sage between, perched on the hill. The whole cabin slant- J ed a little under the heavy heaped-up vine that covered j the roof, light and green, as though forgotten from sum- J mer. A woman stood in the passage. He stopped still. Then all of a sudden his heart began 1 to behave strangely. Like a rocket set off, it began to s leap and expand into uneven patterns of beats which j showered into his brain, and he could not think. But in „J scattering and falling it made no noise. It shot up with 1 ' great power, almost elation, and fell gently, like aero- .8 bats into nets. It began to pound profoundly, then waited irresponsibly, hitting in some sort of inward mockery 1 first at his ribs, then against his eyes, then under his J shoulder blades, and against the roof of his mouth when 'л he tried to say, “Good afternoon, madam.” But he could yj not hear his heart — it was as quiet as ashes falling. This I was rather comforting; still, it was shocking to Bowman J to feel his heart beating at all. Stock-still in his confusion, he dropped his bags, which seemed to drift in slow bulks gracefully through ' 3 the air and to cushion themselves on the gray prostrate 1 grass near the doorstep. As for the woman standing there, he saw at once that J she was old. Since she could not possibly hear his heart, 3 he ignored the pounding and now looked at her carefully, Ж and yet in his distraction dreamily, with his mouth open. Я She had been cleaning the lamp, and held it, half blackened half clear, in front of her. He saw her with ! the dark passage behind her. She was a big woman with a weather-beaten but unwrinkled face; her lips were held < tightly together, and her eyes looked with a curious dulled brightness into his. He looked at her shoes, which were like bundles. If it were summer she would be bare- foot... Bowman, who automatically judged a woman’s age on sight, set her age at fifty. She wore a formless garment of some gray coarse material, rough-dried from ‘ a washing, from which her arms appeared pink and ' 70
unexpectedly round. When she never said a word, and sustained her quiet pose of holding the lamp, he was convinced of the strength in her body. “Good afternoon, madam,” he said. She stared on, whether at him or at the air around him he could not tell, but after a moment she lowered her eyes to show that she would listen to whatever he had to say. “I wonder if you would be interested —” He tried once more. “An accident — my car...” Her voice emerged low and remote, like a sound across a lake. “Sonny he ain’t here.” “Sonny?” “Sonny ain’t here now.” Her son — a fellow able to bring my car up, he decided in blurred relief. He pointed down the hill. “My car’s in tho bottom of the ditch. I’ll need help.” “Sonny ain’t here, but he’ll be here.” She was becoming clearer to him and her voice strong- er, and Bowman saw that she was stupid. He was hardly surprised at the deepening postpone- ment and tedium of his journey. He took a breath, and heard his voice speaking over tho silent blows of his heart. “I was sick. I am not strong yet... May I come in?” He stooped and laid his big black hat over the handle on his bag. It was a humble motion, almost a bow, that instantly struck him as absurd and betraying of all his weakness. He looked up at tho woman, the wind blowing his hair. He might have continued for a long time in l his unfamiliar attitude; he had never been a patient man, but when he was sick he had learned to sink submissively into the pillows, to wait for his medicine. He waited on the woman. Then she, looking at him with blue eyes, turned and held open the door, and after a moment Bowman, as if convinced in his action, stood erect and followed her in. Inside, the darkness of the house touched him like n professional hand, the doctor’s. The woman set the half- cleaned lamp on a table in the center of the room and pointed, also like a professional person, a guide, to a chair with a yellow cowhide seat. She herself crouched on the hearth, drawing her knees up under the shapeless dress. 71
At first he felt hopefully secure. His heart was quieter. The room was enclosed in the gloom of yellow pine boards. ' I He could see the other room, with the foot of an iron bed showing, across the passage. The bed had been made .) up with a red-and-yellow pieced quilt that looked like a map or a picture, a little like his grandmother’s girl- hood painting of Rome burning. He had ached for coolness, but in this room it was * cold. He stared at the hearth with dead coals lying on it and iron pots in the corners. The hearth and smoked chimney wore of the stone he had seen ribbing the hills, mostly slate. Why is there no fire? he wondered. And it was so still. The silence of the fields seemed I to enter and move familiarly through the house. The wind used the open hall. He felt that he was in a myste- м rious, quiet, cool danger. It was necessary to do what?... To talk. “I have a nice line of women’s low-priced shoes...”/ я he said. But the woman answered, “Sonny ’ll be here. He’s , strong. Sonny ’ll move your car.” “Where is he now?” “Farms for Mr Redmond.” Mr Redmond. Mr Redmond. That was someone he would never have to encounter, and he was glad. Some- how the name did not appeal to him... Ina flare of touchi- ness and anxiety, Bowman wished to avoid even mention' of unknown men and their unknown farms. “Do you two live here alone?” He was surprised to hear his old voice, chatty, confidential, inflected for selling shoes, asking a question like that — a thing he did not even want to know. “Yes. We are alone.” He was surprised at the way she answered. She had taken a long time to say that. She had nodded her head ' in a deep way too. Had she wished to affect him with some sort of premonition? he wondered unhappily. Or was it only that she would not help him, after all, by . talking with him? For he was not strong enough to receive : the impact of unfamiliar things without a little talk to break their fall. He had lived a month in which nothing had happened except in his head and his body — an almost Inaudible life of heartbeats and dreams that came back. »
и life of fever and privacy, a delicate life which had left Inin weak to the point of — what? Of begging. The pulse In his palm leapt like a trout in a brook. lie wondered over and over why the woman did not go ahead with cleaning the lamp. What prompted her I о slay there across the room, silently bestowing her presence upon him? He saw that with her it was not n lime for doing little tasks. Her face was grave; she was feeling how right she was. Perhaps it was only politeness. In docility he held his eyes stiffly wide; they fixed them- selves on the woman’s clasped hands as though she held I ho cord they were strung on. Then, “Sonny’s coming,” she said. Ho himself had not heard anything, but there came и man passing the window and then plunging in at the door, with two hounds beside him. Sonny was a big enough man, with his belt slung low about his hips. He looked at least thirty. He had a hot, red face that was yet full of silence. He wore muddy blue pants and an old military coat stained and patched. World War? Bowman wondered. Great God, it was a Confederate * coat. On the back of his light hair he had a wide filthy black hat which seemed to insult Bowman’s own. He pushed down the dogs from his chest. He was strong, with dignity and heaviness in his way of moving... There was (he resemblance to his mother. They stood side by side. ... He must account again for his presence here. “Sonny, this man, he had his car to run off over the prec’pice an’ wants to know if you will git * it out for him,” the woman said after a few minutes. Bowman could not even state his case. Sonny’s eyes lay upon him. He knew he should offer explanations and show money — at least appear either penitent or authoritative. But. all he could do was to shrug slightly. Sonny brushed by him going to the window, followed by the eager dogs, and looked out. There was effort even in the way he was looking, as if he could throw his sight out like a rope. Without turning Bowman felt that his own eyes could have seen nothing: it was too far. “Got me a mule out there an’ got me a block an’ tackle,” said Sonny meaningfully. “I could catch me 73
my mule an' git me my ropes, an’ before long I’d git your car out the ravine.” He looked completely around the room, as if in medi- tation, his eyes roving in their own distance. Then he pressed his lips firmly and yet shyly together, and with the dogs ahead of him this time, he lowered his head and strode out. The hard earth sounded, cupping to his powerful way of walking — almost a stagger. Mischievously, at the suggestion of those sounds, Bowman’s heart leapt again. It seemed to walk about inside him. “Sonny’s goin’ to do it,” the woman said. She said it - again, singing it almost, like a song. She was sitting in her place by the hearth. Without looking out, he heard some shouts and the dogs barking and the pounding of hoofs in short runs on the-hill. In a few minutes Sonny passed under the window with a rope, and there was a brown mule with quivering, shining, purple-looking ears. The mule actually looked in the window. Under its eyelashes it turned target-like eyes into his. Bowman averted his head and saw the woman looking serenely back at the mule, with only satis- faction in her face. She sang a little more, under her breath. It occurred to him, and it seemed quite marvelous, that she was not really talking to him, but rather following the thing that came about with words that were unconscious and part of her looking. So he said nothing, and this time when he did not . reply he felt a curious and strong emotion, not fear, rise up in him. This time, when his heart leapt, something — his soul — seemed to leap too, like a little colt invited out of a pen. He stared at the woman while the frantic nimble- ness of his feeling made his head sway. He could not move; 'there was nothing he could do, unless perhaps he might embrace this woman who sat there growing old and shape- less before him. But he wanted to leap up, to say to her, I have been sick and I found out then, only then, how lonely I am. Is it too late? My heart puts up a struggle inside me, and you may have heard it, protesting against emptiness... It should be full, he would rush on to tell her, thinking of 74
his heart now as a deep lake, it should be holding love like other hearts. It should be flooded with love. There would be a warm spring day... Come and stand in my heart, whoever you are, and a whole river would cover your feet and rise higher and take your knees in whirl- pools, and draw you down to itself, your whole body, your heart too. But he moved a trembling hand across his eyes, and looked at the placid crouching woman across the room. She was still as a statue. He felt ashamed and exhausted by the thought that he might, in one more moment, have I ried by simple words and embraces to communicate some si range thing — something which seemed always to have just escaped him... Sunlight touched the furthest pot on the hearth. It was late afternoon. This time tomorrow he would be some- where on a good graveled road, driving his car past things that happened to people, quicker than their happening. Seeing ahead to the next day, he was glad, and knew that this was no time to embrace an old woman. He could feel in his pounding temples the readying * of his blood for motion and for hurrying away. “Sonny’s hitched up your car by now,” said the woman, “lie’ll git it out the ravine right shortly.” “Fine!” he cried with his customary enthusiasm. Yet it seemed a long time that they waited. It began to get dark. Bowman was cramped in his chair. Any man should know enough to get up and walk around while he waited. There was something like guilt in such stillness and silence. But instead of getting up, he listened... His breathing restrained, his eyes powerless in the growing dark, he listened uneasily for a warning sound, forgetting in wari- ness what it would be. Before long he heard something — soft, continuous, insinuating. “What’s that noise?”he asked, his voice jumping into the dark. Then wildly he was afraid it would be his heart beat- ing so plainly in the quiet room, and she would tell him so. “You might hear the stream,” she said grudgingly. Her voice was closer. She was standing by the table. He wondered why she did not light the lamp. She stood there
Bowman would never speak to her now, for the time was past. 1’11 sleep in the dark, he thought, in his bewil- derment pitying himself. Heavily she moved on to the window. Her arm, vaguely white, rose straight from her full side and she pointed out into the darkness. “That white speck’s Sonny,” she said, talking to her- self. He turned unwillingly and peered over her shoulder; he hesitated to rise and stand beside her. His eyes searched the dusky air. The white speck floated smoothly toward her finger, like a leaf on a river, growing whiter in the dark. It was as if she had shown him something secret, part of her life, but had offered no explanation. He looked away. He was moved almost to tears, feeling for no reason that she had made a silent declaration equivalent to his own. His hand waited upon his chest. Then a step shook the house, and Sonny was in the room Bowman felt how the woman left him there and went to the other man’s side. “I done got your car out, mister," said Sonny’s voice in the dark. “She’s settin’ a-wailin’ in the road, turned to go back where she come from.” “Finel” said Bowman, projecting his own voice to loudness. “I’m surely much obliged — I could never have done it myself — I was sick...” “I could do it easy,” said Sonny. Bowman could feel them both waiting in the dark, and he could hear the dogs panting out in the yard, wait- ing to bark when he should go. He felt strangely helpless and resentful. Now that he could go, he longed to stay. From what was he being deprived? His chest was rudely shaken by the violence of his heart. These people cherished something here that he could not see, they withheld some ancient promise of food and warmth and light. Between them they had a conspiracy. He thought of the way she had moved away from him and gone to Sonny, she had flowed toward him. He was shaking with cold, he was tired, and it was not fair. Humbly and yet angrily he stuck his hand into his pocket. “Of course I’m going to pay you for everything — ” “We don’t take money for such,” said Sonny’s voice belligerently. 71)
"I want to pay. But do something more.. Let me stay— tonight...” He took another step toward them. If only they could see him, they would know his sincerity, his real need! His voice went on, "I’m not very strong yot, I’m not able to walk far, even hack to my car, maybe, I don’t know — I don’t know exactly where 1 am-r” He stopped. He felt as if he might burst into tears. What would they think of him! Sonny came over and put his hands on him. Bowman felt them pass (they were professional too) across his chest, over his hips. He could feel Sonny’s eyes upon him in the dark. “You ain’t no revenuer come sneakin’ here, mister, ain’t got no gun?” To this end of nowhere! And yet lie had come. He made a grave answer. "No.” “You can stay.” “Sonny,” said the woman, “you’ll have to borry * some fire.” “I’ll go git it from Redmond’s,” said Sonny. “What?” Bowman strained to hear their words to each other. “Our fire, it’s out, and Sonny’s got to borry some, because its dark an’ cold,” she said. “But matches — I have matches —” “We don’t have no need for ’em,” she said proudly. "Sonny’s goin1 after his own fire.” “I’m goin’ to Redmond’s,” said Sonny with an air of importance, and he went out. After they had waited a while, Bowman looked out the window and saw a light moving over the hill. It spread itself out like a little fan. It zigzagged along the field, darting and swift, not like Sonny at all... Soon enough, Sonny staggered in, holding a burning stick behind him in tongs, fire flowing in his wake, blazing light into the corners of the room. “We’ll make a fire now,” the woman said, taking the brand. When that was done she lit the lamp. It showed its dark and light. The whole room turned golden-yellow like some sort of flower, and the walls smelled of it and 77
seemed to tremble with the quiet rushing of the fire, and the waving of the burning lampwick in ‘ its funnel of light. The woman moved among the iron pots. With the tongs she dropped hot coals on top of the iron lids. They made a set of soft vibrations, like the sound of a bell far away. She looked up and over at Bowman, but he could not answer. He was trembling... “Have a drink, mister?” Sonny asked. He had brought in a chair from the other room and sat astride it with his folded arms across the back. Now we are all visible to one another, Bowman thought’, and cried, “Yes sir, you bet, thanks!” “Come after me and do just what I do,” said Sonny. It was another excursion into the dark. They went through the hall, out to the back of the house, past a shed and a hooded well. They came to a wilderness of thicket. “Down on your knees,” said Sonny. . x "What?” Sweat broke out on his forehead. He understood when Sonny began to crawl through a sort of tunnel that the bushes made over the ground. He followed, startled in spite of himself when a twig or a thorn touched him.gently without making a sound clinging to him and finally letting him go. - Sonny stopped crawling and, crouched on his knees, began to dig with both his hands into the dirt. Bowman shyly struck matches and made a light. In a few minutes Sonny pulled up a jug. He poured out some of the whisky into a bottle from his coat pocket, and buried the jug again. “You never know who’s liable to knock at your door,” he said, and laughed. “Start back,” he said, almost formally. “Ain’t no need for us to drink outdoors like hogs.” At the table by the fire, sitting opposite each other in their chairs, Sonny and Bowman took drinks out of the bottle, passing it across. The dogs slept; one of them was having a dream. “This is good,” said Bowman. “This is’what I needed.” It was just as though he were drinking the fire off the hearth.
“He makes it,” said the woman with quiet pride. She was pushing the coals off the pots, and the smells of corn bread and coffee circled the room. She set every- thing on the table before the men, with a bone-handled knife stuck into one of the potatoes, splitting out its golden fiber. Then she stood for a minute looking at them, tall and full above them where they sat. She loaned a little toward them. “You all can eat now,” she said, and suddenly smiled. Bowman had just happened to be looking at her. He set his cup back on the table in unbelieving protest. A pain pressed at his eyes. He saw that she was not an old woman. She was young, still young. He could think of no number of years for her. She was the same age as Sonny, and she belonged to him. She stood with the deep dark corner of the room behind her, the shifting yellow light scattering over her head and her gray formless dress, trembling over her tall body when it bent over them in its sudden communication. She was young. Her teeth were shining and her eyes glowed. She turned and walked slowly and heavily out of the room, and he heard her sit down on the cot and then lie down. The pattern on the quilt moved. “She’s goin* to have a baby,” said Sonny, popping a bite into his mouth. Bowman could not speak. He was shocked with know- ing what was really in this house. A marriage, a fruitful marriage. That simple thing. Anyone could have had that. Somehow he felt unable to be indignant or protest, although some sort of joke had certainly been played upon him. There was nothing remote or mysterious here — only something private. The only secret was the ancient communication between two people. But the memory of the woman’s waiting silently by the cold hearth, of the man’s stubborn journey a mile away to get fire, and how they finally brought out their food and drink and filled the room proudly with all they had to show, was sud- ' denly too clear and too enormous within him for res- ponse, ... “You ain’t as hungry as you look," said Sonny. 79 ‘ • -4
The woman came out of the bedroom as soon as tho men had finished, and ate her supper while her husband stared peacefully into the fire. Then they put the dogs out, with the food that was left. “I think I’d better sleep here by the fire, on the floor," said Bowman. He felt that ho had been cheated, and that ho could afford now to be generous. Ill though he was, he was not going to ask them for their bed. Ho was through with asking favors in this house, now that he understood what was there. “Sure, mister.” But he had not known yet how slowly he understood. They had not meant to give him their bed. After a liltlo interval they both rose and looking at him gravely went into the other room. He lay stretched by tho fire until it grew low and dying. He watched every tongue of blaze lick out and vanish. “There will be special reduced prices on all footwear during the month of January,” he found himself repealing quietly, and then he lay with his lips tight shut. How many noises tho night had! He heard the stream running, tho fire dying, and he was sure now that he heard his heart beating, too, the sound it made under his ribs. He heard breathing, round and deep, of the man and his wife in the room across the passage. And that was all. But emotion swelled patiently within him, and he wished that the child were his. He must get back to where he had been before. Ho stood weakly before tho red coals and put on his overcoat. It felt too heavy on his shoulders. As he started out he looked and saw that the woman had never got through with cleaning the lamp. On some impulse he put all the money from his billfold under its fluted glass base, almost ostentatiously. Ashamed, shrugging a little, and then shivering, ho took his bags and went out. Tho cold of the air seemed to lift him bodily. The moon was in tho sky. On the slope he began to run, ho could not help it. Just as he reached the road, where his car seemed to sit in the moonlight like a boat, his heart began to give off tremendous explosions like a rifle, bang bang bang. 80
He sank in fright onto the road, his bags falling about him. He felt as if all this had happened before. He covered his heart with both hands to keep anyone from hearing the noise it made. But nobody heard it. COR DISCUSSION 1. What is your emotional reaction to the story? 2. Does the sotting contribute any idea that modifies the reader’s understanding of the character? 3. Does the mentioning of the people whom Bowman met before add anything to the reader’s idea of his character and way of life? 4. What are Bowman’s feelings toward the people in the house? Do they change from the beginning to the end of the story? At what moment did you notice this change? 5. What contradictions are there in Bowman’s character? Bind the examples in the text. 6. What is the main reason of Bowman’s loneliness? Of what was he deprived in his life? 7. Do you think that the people in the house felt lonely? If not, why so? 8. Why Bowman was shocked with knowing what really was in the house where Sonny and the woman lived? 9. Why couldn’t he stay in the house any more? 10. Can you extract from the story any statements that might, with suitable alterations, seive as generalizations about human natuie?
Irwin Shaw WISTFUL, DELICATELY GAY The phone rang, and Miss Drake answered it. Miss Drake is my secretary. She was presented to me on Christ- mas, when I was made a junior partner in Ronaldson, Ronaldson, Jones and Muller. She has her desk in my office. My office is only nine by eight feet and it does not have a window of its own, but she is a sign that I am advancing in life, and 1 still find myself looking over at her with the same gloating sense of ownership and achievement that a yachtsman has in looking at the first cup he won in a big regatta. “Mr Royal,” Miss Drake said, “it’s for you. A Miss Hunt.” She has a provocative, half-scolding, half- indulgent way of talking to me whenever a woman
asks for me on the telephone, even when it’s my wife. _ “ ' - 4 A Miss Hunt. I .hesitated a moment, weighing dangers. Miss Drake waited. She was new to the firm, and Carol Hunt on the telephone was only a Miss Hunt to her. She was not yet well enough established in the office hierarchy to have heard all the gossip. Or perhaps the gossip was so old that even the most malicious or most loose-tongued of the secretaries had forgotten it or at least considered it so worn it would only be trotted out when everything else had been exhausted. After all, it was almost two years ago... Pain has its own rules, and those people who tell you the human race seeks to avoid it do not, of course, know what they’re talking about. “Shall I tell her you’re busy?” Miss Drake asked, hold- ing her hand over the phone. She is one of those girls' who eventually have to be fired because they do too much thinking for their employers. “No,” I said, hoping my face was my usual weekday business face. “I’ll speak to her.” Miss Drake flipped a lever and I picked up the phone, and there was Carol’s voice, after two years. “Peter,” she said, “I hope you don’t mind my calling you.” “No,” I said. Whatever I felt, “mind” was not the word to describe it. “I’ve debated with myself for weeks,” she said, “and I’ve put it off and put it off, and today’s the last day and 1 just had to talk to you.” Her voice was the same — low, trained, musical, sensual, and I turned in my chair so Miss Drake couldn’t see my face. I closed my eyes, listen- ing, and the two years, slippery, lost, painful, slid danger- ously away, and Carol Hunt was calling me to tell me to meet her at the bar near her house on Second Avenue, calling me to remind me we were expected for lunch on Sunday in Westport, calling me to tell me she loved me, ... “I’m leaving this afternoon, Peter,” the voice went on, flowing, grave, with its sunny echoes of childhood that had once given me so much pleasure, “and if it isn’t too much bother for you, I’d love to see you. Just for a few minutes. There’s something I want to tell you.” 83
“Leaving?” I wished Miss Drake would get out of the - office. “Where to?” “I’m going home, Peter,” Carol said. “Home?” I asked stupidly. Somehow, it had always seemed to me Carol’s only home was New York City. “San Francisco,” she said. “My train leaves at three- thirty.” I looked at the clock on my desk. It was eleven-fifteen, i “Look,” I said. “I’ll take you to lunch.” As I said it, I decided I wouldn’t tell Doris. After six and a half months of marriage, a man is entitled to one lie. “I can’t make lunch,” Carol said. There was no point in arguing with her. Whatever other changes the two years had made in her, I was sure that hadn’t changed. “When?” I said. “When and where do you want me to meet you?” “Well, the train leaves from Pennsylvania Station,” she said. "Do you want to meet me across the street, in the Statler bar, at —” She hesitated, as though she were going over in her mind exactly what she had to say to me, and timing it, like the director of a radio program with a stop watch. — “At say, two thirty?” “Two thirty,” I said. Then 1 made one of those jokes that wake you up at night and make you squirm in your bed. “What’ll you be wearing?” I asked. “In case I don’t recognize you.” 1 suppose I wanted to prove the two years hadn’t damaged me as much as they had damaged me. Or maybe I was just trying to sound brainlessly hard- boiled because that was the style; everybody we know tries, as much as possible, to sound brainlessly hard- boiled. There was a silence on the phone, and for a moment I was afraid she had hung up. Then she spoke. Her voice was flat and controlled and not affectionate. "I’ll be wearing a smile,” she said. “A wide, girlish, demolished smile. See you at two-thirty.” •I put the phone down and I tried to work for another halfhour, but of course I couldn’t work. Finally I stood up and put on my hat and coat and told Miss Drake I wouldn’t be in till around four o’clock that afternoon. One advantage of being a junior partner at Ronaldson, Ronaldson, Jones and Muller is that you can occasionally 84
take an afternoon or part of an afternoon off for private tragedy or celebration, if the tragedies and celebrations do not crowd each other with unbusinesslike frequency. I walked aimlessly around the city, waiting for two- i hirty. It was a clear, cold, sunny day, and New York had a winter glitter, a brilliance of light reflected of a million windows, a deep richness of northern shadow, which made the city seem bold, busy, and entertaining. I won- dered how Carol felt at that moment, knowing that in lluее hours she would be leaving the city. I met her at a theatrical cocktail party in an apartment on Fifty-fourth Street. I was still new enough to New York so that I went to every party 1 was invited to. Harold Sinclair, who worked in the office with me, had a brother, Charley, who was an actor and who occasionally took us along with him when he was invited out. I liked theatrical parties. The girls were pretty, the drinks plentiful, and the people seemed bright, generous, and amusing, espe- cially after a day spent among lawyers. She was standing against a wall talking to an elderly woman with bluish hair who was, I later found out, the widow of a producer. I had never seen Carol Hunt before, on or, off the stage, and she had not yet played any part important enough so that people would remember her name or point her out. I looked at her, and I was sure she was the most beautiful girl I had ever seen. Maybe I still think so. She was not spectacular-looking, but she seemed to shine, in the corner of the crowded, smoky room, with a scrubbed, springtime health. She was ^inall, blond, with a neat-brushed head and deep-blue eyes, and her movements were plain and unaffected, and as she talked to the producer’s widow her eyes did not flicker hungrily over the room, as did the eyes of most of the other women I here. She had a slender throat that rose out of the high col- lar of her dress, and her mouth, which had only a light touch of lipstick on it, seemed almost childish and deli- cately gay. She gave the impression of being frail, innocent, and very young, and even though wo were at a place in which almost all the people were connected in one way or another with the theater, I felt she was, like me, an outsider. 85
I also felt that, because of the delicacy of her structure and coloring, I was the only one who realized how beauti- ful she was. I was, of course, wrong. Three months later, I asked her to marry me. In those three months, I met her almost every night, waiting for her at the stage door of the theater in which she was playing and taking her out, with a miser’s wis- dom, to supper in small, quiet restaurants. I watched her in her play six or seven times, and although she had only a small and undistinguished part, I came away each time with the feeling she was a superlatively talent-r- ed actress. Lovers become biographers, and in those three months of quiet midnights I ransacked her past, feeling, I suppose, that in discovering the modest details of her childhood, and adolescence and the exact nature of her ambitions I was somehow making her more completely my own. The more I learned about her the more I became con-, vinced she was not only a beautiful girl but an extraordinary and valuable one. Since the waT I had had the uneasy impression that a good many of my friends', men and women alike, had allowed themselves to become soft, to drift, to limit their aspiration. While it was easy to find excuses in the unsteady climate of our times, I could not help feeling that quite a few of the people I liked best and was most attached to were, finally useless and unworthy. So it was almost with a sense of relief that, finding myself irrevo- cably in love with Carol Hunt, I found her at the same time to be so full of merit. She had arrived in New York five years before, along with four thousand or forty thousand other girls. She was just out of college, and she had firmly told a young man who ran the eight-eighty * faster than any other young man on the Pacific Coast that year, that she would not marry him. His name was Dean and he looked more like a movie star than a runner, Carol said, and his family owned a chain of hotels on the West Coast. As far as she could tell, carefully taking into account her youth and her inexperience and the natural pride that came with being offered a man who was the target for all the other girls she knew, she was in love with him. She had only 86
II vo hundred dollars to her name and her father was dead mid her mother had married a man who worked, not very prosperously, in an engineer’s office, but she said no. She said no because she >vantcd to go to New York nnd be an actress. She was aware of the banality of the mnbilion, aware, too, of the four thousand other girls who would descend upon the city that year with the same mnbilion and who would, along with the survivors and victors of previous years, compete with her in that dwindl- ing arena for the few prizes of the season. She was aware of the size of the gamble, the stake she was risking (her youth; the fleet, well-loved young man; the chain of ho- tels, with everything that went along with it); she was aware of the role of luck in the profession, the waste of talent, the probability and pain of failure. She had figured it all out, logically and hardheadedly, because she was a logical and intelligent girl and capable of thought, an attribute that, she knew, made her supe- rior to almost all the other four thousand girls, and that, given the nature of the theater, would not help her to succeed over them. And after figuring it all out, she had I nken her five hundred dollars out of the bank, kissed I he mournful runner good-by, and sat up three days and four nights in a steamy coach and arrived in New York. She did all this not because she was stagestruck or had any false notions about the gaity of backstage life, or because she was adventurous and wanted to live in n strange, great city or meet the kind of men she would never be able to meet in San Francisco. She did it because she possessed, she was sure, great talent, because there was nothing else in the whole world she wished to do. She did it with the hard, sexless obsessiveness of an artist cleaving to his art. She had a modest success almost immediately. She got small parts and did them acceptably or better or even did them as well as they could be done. But the satis- faction she derived from all this was tantalizing and incom- plete. The necessity of subduing her powers, of which she was by now more confident than ever, to the modest, supporting tones of a bit-part * actress left her with a sense of time wasted, opportunities lost, energies dissi- pated. 87.
Three of four times she was called back for audition after audition for leading parts in plays in which other» ’ I girls finally made great successes. But each time something - J happened — a star telegraphed from Hollywood that she would be available for the season; a girl who, in the/'’3 eyes of the director, was a more likely match for the:3 leading man, was discovered; an actress who had received rave * reviews the season before suddenly closed on * the road and stepped in. Each time she disciplined her disappointment and impatience, accepted smaller roles, and did them with hidden fury, smeared, as she put it, with ingenue charm. Carefully, she made no enemies, displayed no grudges, у When her chance came, when the jumble of events finally I fell into the one, glittering pattern that would send her climbing upwards, she would have no offended director; no half-guilty, half-angry producer; no jealous character*, actress, unexpectedly standing in her way. In the meantime, she tried television, but after she4 J had been in three different programs, she turned down. I all other offers for jobs in that medium. She could have used the money, but the three programs had convinced her the damage she was doing herself was more than the, money was worth. She had an accurate conception of how she worked best, and she knew she was one of those actress- es who feel their way into a part, who need long rehears- \ als and weeks of reflection to master a role. It was not modesty but pride and reliance on her own powers of criticism that made her realize that, with the short days of rehearsal that were all the television people could, afford, she played inadequately, even if the inadequacy, for the moment, was noted only by herself. J ч When, like almost every pretty girl around the thea- ter, she was offered a screen test, she worked hard on it and was not displeased with the result when she saw it? on the screen. The man who had arranged the test and who sat in the projection room with her when it was shown,' | was impressed, too. But he was an old man who had been in the business a long time and he had seen many pretty and talented girls. "Very good,” he said, “very good, indeed, Miss Hunt.” I Io had a soft, polite voice and courtly manners, and ho
wns used to discouraging hungry young people in the gentl- est., most assuaging way. “But there would be objections on the Coast to the present nose.” “What?” Carol asked, surprised and a little hurt. She was proud of her nose and thought in some ways it was her best feature. It was quite long and a little arched, with tense, nervous-looking nostrils, and an artistic young man who had been attached to her had once told her it wns like the noses of the great English beauties of the portraits of the eighteenth century. By a trifle, a shadow, It seemed to deviate to one side, but one had to study her face to realize this, and the slight irregularity gave, she was sure, an added note of interest to her face. “What’s wrong with the nose?” she asked. “It’s a little long for film, my dear,” the old man said gently, “and you and I know, don’t we, that it is not plumb straight. It is a lovely nose and one you could be proud of all the days of your life,” the old man went on, smiling, honeying * the harsh, official, impersonal truth with his own sweet-tempered, but personal and therefore finally valueless truth, “but the American public is not quite used to seeing young girls on film with noses of that particular quality.” “I could name you six stars,” Carol said stubbornly, "with noses a lot funnier-looking than mine.” The old man smiled and shrugged. “Of course, my dear,” he said. “But they are stars. They are personalities. The public accepts a personality all in one lump. If you were a star, we would assign publicity men to write poems Io your nose. In a little while, it would be a priceless asset. When an unknown girl came into the office, we would say, “Look, she has the Hunt nose. Let’s hire her at once.” lie smiled at her again, and she couldn’t help smiling back, warmed, even at the moment of disappointment, by his absurd, gentle manner. “Well,” she said, getting up, “you’ve been very kind.” Hut the old man did not rise. He sat in the big leather chair, his hand absently touching the controls of the box that communicated with the operator in the projection booth, staring thoughtfully at her, doing the job he was paid to do. “Of course,” he said, “something could be done.” “What do you mean?” Carol asked. 8Э
"Noses,” the old man said, “while works of God, are 1 susceptible to the intervention of man.” Now Carol saw he was embarrassed by what he was 3 forced by his position to say, and was using this high-flowmj and rhetorical fashion of speaking to show her he was jJ embarrassed. She was certain there were very few actors4 or actresses who could embarrass this hard, gentle old 1 man, and she was flattered by it. “A plastic surgeon,” the old man was saying, “a little snip here, a little scraping of bone there, and in three \ weeks you could almost be guaranteed a nose that would :<1 meet with anyone’s approval.” “You mean,” Carol said, “in three weeks I could havedM the standard, regulation-issue, starlet’s nose.” The old man smiled sadly. “More or- less,” he said. “And what would you do then?” “I would sign you to a contract,” the old man saidi * “and I would predict quite a promising future for you'A on the Coast.” Quite, Carol noticed. Quite a promising. He refuses to lie, even in his predictions. Almost as if the old man had put it into words, she could sense the images that were d going through his head. The pretty girl on a contract, with her acceptable bobbed nose, being used for bathing-' suit publicity stills, small parts, perhaps after a while ! for unimportant leads in unimportant pictures, for two, 3 ’ three, four years, then being let out to make room for other, newer, more acceptable pretty girls. “No, thank you,” Caro] said. “I’m terribly attached A to my present crooked long nose.” The old man stood up now, nodding, as though he Q was pleased, on his own, if not on the company’s account, by her decision. “For the stage,” he said, “it is faultless. Better than faultless.” ‘‘I’m going to confess something,” Carol said candily,* ’ more open with this old man than she had permitted her- A self to be with anyone else in the city. “The only reason I’m up here is that if you make a name for yourself in the movies, it’s easier to go where you want to go in the theater. I’ve planned myself for the stage.” The old man stared at her, rewarding her candor with surprise, then approval. “So much the better for the stage,” he said gallantly. “I’ll call you again.”
“When?” Carol asked. “When you’re a great star,” he said lightly, “to offer you all the money in the world to work for us.” He put out his hand, and Carol shook it. He held her hand in both his for a moment, his face saddened, mischie- vous, regretful, touched by the memory of all the lovely, ambitious, courageous girls he had seen in the last thirty years. “Isn’t it hell?” he said, grinning, patting her hand in his rosy hands. “I too,” I said, when she told me this story, “am at- tached to your present nose. And to your present hair. And to your lips. And to your —” “Careful,” she said. “Remember, one of the reasons I like you so much is that you’re so restrained and legal.” * So, for a little while longer, I remained restrained and legal. With all her devotion to her talent, Carol was careful Io keep it almost completely to herself. Obsessions, she explained one night, especially the obsession with one’s own abilities and ultimate triumph, could very easily give a woman a reputation for harshness and egotism, and arouse resentment in the people one might eventually depend on for the big chance. And her quality, which she judged cooly and without conceit, was one of frailty, wistfulness, pathos, adolescence, romance. These were good things to have and great careers had been made in the theater with just such weapons, but there would be little chance to display them on stage if off stage she spoke with the assurance of a general in command of a victo- rious army or an evangelist preaching the certainty of hell. So she carried her ambition with her as undeclared baggage, as a curious kind of.magic, hidden food that nourished her only so long as no one suspected its exist- ence. Actually, there was little strain in hiding it. Be- cause her vanity was concerned only with her final full expression of herself on the stage,. Carol sought no inter- mediate, meaningless social triumphs. At parties she never pressed for the center of attention, was kindly in her criticisms, made no attempt to steal away from other girls the occasional playwrights and directors whom 91
they appeared with and who might be useful in obtaining parts. She was wary and fastidious with men and was, in male company, frail, wistful, pathetic, delicately* gay, adolescent, romantic. And only part of this was cynical. The three months of revelations served a double pur- pose. I am methodical by inclination and training, and I felt I was learning all there was to know about the girl I was going to ask, when the time was ripe, to marry me. What’s more, everything I learned about her made her seem more valuable. The sobriety and purity of her pur-; pose put her far above the aimless young women I had until then traveled * with, and the courage and intelli- gence with which she handled herself would be, I fell, reassuring foundations for a marriage. And the combi- nation of these rather austere virtues with her delicacy^ and youth I found charming and deeply touching. As for her, the discovery, after five years of reticence, of a confidant who would not compete with her or betray her and who so plainly admired the very qualities she had to dissemble everywhere else, seemed to slacken a nervous tension in ber and lift a burden from her shoul- ders. At first she was suspicious of my curiosity, then amused and grateful; and finally, I think, it seemed, as much as anything else, to bring her to the point where she told me she loved me. We were sitting in my car in front of her apartment building on East Fifty-eighth Street when 1 asked her to marry me. It was a Sunday night, and I had picked her up at the theater in which she was rehearsing a play that was due to open in Boston in twenty days. Charley Sin- clair was in the same play, and we had stopped off for a drink with him before driving on home across town from the theater. It was about eleven-thirty at night, in the autumn, and the street was dark and deserted and I felt, well, this is as good a time as any. I asked her, and she didn’t say anything. She just sat neatly, in her big cloth coat, on her side of the front seat, looking straight ahead through the windshield at the dark street and the rows of lampposts. 1)2
It was the first time I had ever asked a girl to marry Hie and I wasn’t quite sure of procedure, and it didn’t look as though Carol was going to be any help at all. “I’m doing this as a health measure,” I said, smiling erratically to take the taint of ceremony off the moment and make it easier for her to say no if that was what she wanted to say. “1 have to get up at seven o’clock in the morning to get to the office on time, and if I have to meet yon for supper at eleven-thirty every night for a couple of more months I’m going to run down like a pitiful old 1925 Ford. I’m just not durable enough,” I said, “to be a lovelorn young lawyer who keeps a lovelorn young actor’s hours.” Carol sat there silently, looking through the wind- shield, her profile outlined by the lamplights. "Give me a minute,” she said at last. “I have something solemn to say?’ “Take an hour,” I said. “Take the whole blessed, beauti- ful night.” “I was waiting for you to say it,” Carol said. “I wanted you to say it." “What?” I said. “That my health was failing because of night-work?” “No. That you wanted to marry me.” “I have a brilliant idea,” I said, moving toward her. "Let’s get married next week, before you find out about my past or another war starts, and let’s go some place that’s warm and lawyerless for our honeymoon. I can get six weeks since it’s my first honeymoon.” “I can’t get six weeks,” Carol said. “That’s part of the solemn thing I have to say.” “Oh,” I sighed. “The theater. I forgot. Maybe,” I said hopefully, “it’ll be a turkey * and close in Boston and we can fly to Sicily the day after —” “It’s not going, to be a turkey,” she said. “I think it’s going to be a success. But even if it isn’t I wouldn’t leave New York for six weeks in the middle of the season.” “Okay,” I said, “we’ll have our honeymoon on Forty- fourth Street.” “You must listen,” Carol said. “I want you to know now what it would be like if we got married.” “I know how it would be if we got married,” 1 said. “Smashing.” 03
“J want you to remember something. I mean to be a great actress.” “Hell,” I said, “I’m not going to complain about that. I’m modern. If it was up to me, I’d throw open all the harems.” I hadn’t known how I was going to behave the first time I asked a girl to marry me, but I certainly never expected I’d be making one jittery joke after another. “What I’m trying to say,” Carol went on stubbornly, “is that if I get married it has to be on certain terms. Just as though I were a man —” “Now, darling,” I said, “nobody here is opposed to female suffrage or —” “What I mean,” Carol said, “is that I’m not going to be one of those girls who hang around the theater for a couple of years and then get married and have babies and move to the suburbs and talk about how they were actresses in New York for the rest of their lives —” “Now, wait a minute, darling,” I said. “Nobody’s- moving to the suburbs —” “The main thing in my life,” Carol said, “is not going to be my husband. It’s going to be my work, just as the main thing in a man’s life is, finally, his work. Is that okay with you?” she asked harshly. “Dandy," I said. “I love it.” -4 “It hasn’t happened yet," Carol said, “but it’s going to happen. My chance. And when it comes, I’m going to be there to jump at it. I’m not going to be off on vacations or tending babies or giving bridge parlies. And if I have to go on the road with a play for a year at a time, because that’s what I have to do —” “Oh, lady,” I groaned, “not tonight.” She had to laugh then and we kissed, and for a while we just sal there, close together, half-forgetting what- she had been talking about, and when I said, “It’ll work out all right,” she nodded and kissed me again, and them we went to a bar to celebrate and we decided to get married sometime in June, at which time her play would probably have finished its run, anyhow. When I left her at her door, I kissed her good night, and then, holding her, 1 said, very seriously, “One ques-. tion, Carol...” “Yes?” 64
"What happens,” I asked, “if nothing happens? If your chance never comes?” She hesitated a moment. Then she said soberly, “I’ll bo disappointed for the rest of my life.” The chance came a little more than three weeks later, In Boston, and it came in a way nobody predicted and it finished us. • We spoke over the phone almost every night, and the next to the last time I called her it was nearly one o’clock In the morning and she was in her hotel room. The play had opened two nights before, and she told me she had got ten a nice little notice in one of the evening papers, that Eileen Munsing, the star who had come back from the movies to play the lead, had received very good reviews and was no longer growing hysterical during rehearsals. She also told me she loved me and she was looking forward to Saturday, when I was coming up on the morning trajn for the weekend. Twelve hours later, when I left my office to go out to lunch, I bought a newspaper and there, on the front page, was Carol’s picture. The photograph of a man by the name of Samuel Borensen was next to it, and the reason the two pici ures were together was that at four-thirty that morning Samuel Borensen had been found lying dead on the bed In Carol Hunt’s hotel room in Boston. Samuel Borensen’s photo had been on the front pages of the newspapers a good many times during his life — smiling, from airplane ramps on the way to conferences in Europe; patriotic, addressing banquets of leaders of industry; solemn, receiving honorary degrees from uni- versities at commencement exercises. He was one of those people you think of as moving publicly from place to place, making pronouncements and running things. I had never met him and I hadn’t known Carol knew him. I looked carefully at his photograph. He looked fleshy, handsome, robust, and conscious of his own value. I read the account that went with the photograph and discovered he was fifty years old and he had a wife and two almost grown children in Palm Beach. Carol, according to the newspaper, was an attractive, youthful blond, at the moment appearing in Mrs Howard, which was scheduled to open in two weeks in New York. 05
I threw the paper away and went back to iny apart- ment and called Boston. 1 was surprised I was put through immediately to Carol’s room. Somehow I had the feeling that now Carol had made the front page of the newspapers she would be very hard to reach. “Yes?” Her voice was calm, musical. “Carol, this is Peter." “Oh.” “Do you want me to come up there?” I asked. I tried to keep my voice free of accusation or judgement. “No,” she said. “Do you want to explain anything?” “No,” she said. “Well,” I said, “good-by.” “Good-by, Peter.” I hung up. I look a drink, then called my office and told them I was going out of town for ten days. I had told people about our engagement, and they had read the newspapers down at the office by then and they said, “Sure, go ahead." Then I got into the car and drove into Connecticut, to a little town where there was a pleasant hotel I had stopped at, the summer before, for lunch. I was the only guest, and I spent my time reading, taking walks, and looking out at the bare trees and the dead winter land- scape. I thought about Carol a good deal of the time. I went over our three months together, searching for dues I might have missed out of stupidity or infatuation, and I couldn’t find a single one. Borensen’s name hadn’t come up once, I was sure, and whatever attachments she might have had with other men she must have broken off as soon as she met me, because I couldn’t remember any time she hadn’t been able to see me when I asked for a date. Curiously, I wasn’t angry. I was hurt, of course, and shaken, and for a time I thought of leaving New York and starting over somewhere else, but I found myself worrying more for her sake than for my own. The vision of Carol, frail, girlish, proper, caught up with doctors, policemen, reporters, and forced to come onto a stage to be devoured by the gossiping eyes of a new audience every evening 96
kept me from sleeping at night. As for her career, I was sure it was finished. After five days alone in the empty hotel, I was thinking almost exclusively of Carol, and trying to figure out ways I could help her. Love, I was finding out, does not stop conveniently, just because one day, on the way to lunch, you pick up a newspaper and see a girl’s picture on the front page. I was on the point of getting into the car and driving up to Boston to see for myself if there was anything I could do for Carol, when I remembered Charley Sinclair was in the same play. I called Harold Sinclair at the office for Charley’s telephone number, and then I put in a per- son-to-person call for Charley in Boston. Before appearing there, it would help if I found out just what was happen- ing to Carol and in just what way I could help her most. There was no question in my mind, of course, of going through with the marriage. I was going on a rescue mis- sion, I told myself grimly, not as a garlanded sacri- fice. “Hi, Peter,” Charley said when they finally put the connection through. “What’s the good word?” * He sound- ed surprised to hear from me. “I’m all right,” I said. “How is it up in Boston?" “Standing room only for the last two nights,” Charley said. “I don’t mean that,” I said impatiently. Charley Sin- clair is a kind of lightweight, and he has a knack for saying the wrong thing. I suppose that’s why he became an actor. “How’s Carol?” “Blooming,” Charley said. “She’s being so brave and bereaved* she’d make a statue weep gin.” I had always thought Charley liked her. I suddenly realized why Carol had always been so quiet about her- self around theatrical people. “How are they treating her?” I asked, forcing myself to be patient with him. “The people in the play, I mean?” “Everybody’s being so damned considerate,” Charley said, “you’d think her father just died.” “Have they asked her to give notice?” “Hell, no,” Charley said. “They’re just kicking them- selves * they didn’t put her name up in lights. Why do you think we’re selling out every night?” 4 И. В. Ступников 97
“Are you kidding?” I still didn’t believe him. I know I strange things happen in the theater, but this was too.'1'Д much. “Kidding?” he asked. “When she comes out on theJiM stage, they make a funny little gurgling sound, and then I it gets so quiet you’d think they’d all been strangled j in their seats. And you can feel them following every move she makes, as though she had a private spot- light on her al] night. And she brings down thecal house * when she goes off. Eileen Munsing is ready to -Я blow.” x “I don’t care about that,” I said. “How is she taking it?” “Who knows,” Charley said coolly, “how that girl takes anything? If you’re interested, the director says she’s twenty times better than she ever was before." “Well,” I said lamely, “that’s fine.” “Why?” Charley asked. “One more question,” I said, ignoring the “Why?” ;j “Do you think people will hire her after this?” “They’ll fall all over themselves,” Charley said. “Two , agents have been up from New York already. You coming up?” P “No,” I said. "People die every day,” Charley said. “Some give 4 their bodies to science, some to art. Do you want me to „ pass on any word?" “No,” I said. “Thanks, Charley.” “You’re a fine friend,” Charley said. “You didn’t J ask once how I was doing.” “How're you doing, Charley?” “Lousy,” he said. He chuckled coldly. You’d never Я think he and his brother are in the same family. “See;.1? you in New York.” He hung up. After that, there didn’t seem to be any sense in hang- • ing around an empty little hotel in Connecticut ini the middle of the winter, and I drove to the city and I went back to work. The first few days were not easy, and every time I came into a room I had the feeling people had been telling each other about me. Even now, two years after it happened, I still get suspicious ', if people break off their conversations when 1 approach >' 98
them, and I find myself searching their faces for hidden signs of amusement or pity. I hadn’t intended to see Carol again, but on the opening night of her play, I was in the balcony, alone,/ hunching into myself a little, I suppose, hoping no one would recognize me. I paid very little attention to the play itself. I was waiting for Carol’s entrance, and when it came I saw Charley Sinclair had been telling the truth. There was a rippling, hushing sound, and then a kind of riveted silence. And I saw what Charley meant when he said it was as though Carol had a private spot- light on her which followed her wherever she moved and sucked the attention of the audience to her, making even the plainest of her lines and least important of her movements take on a significance out of all pro- portion to her role. And it was true, too, she was better than she had ever been. She looked beautiful, and she played with a new certainty and serenity, as though this sudden, intense focusing on her had deepened her talent. At the curtain, she received almost as much applause as the star of the show, Eileen Munsing, and as I made my way out of the theater, I heard her name on people’s lips again and again. I bought all the papers the next day and saw she had received a great deal of notice, more than her part deserved. The critics, who were gentlemen and not gossip writers, said nothing about what had happened in Boston, and two of them went all the way about her, predicting stardom. And one critic, who, I was sure, Carol must have thought was the most perceptive man in New York that morning, even used the words frail, wistful, romantic, and gay. My own reaction was one of neither pain nor pleasure. I was numb and I was curious, and I think I was search- ing, both at the theater and in the papers the next day, for a key to where I had gone so wrong. I didn’t see Carol after that, but I followed her on the theatrical pages, and I was not surprised when I read she was leaving the cast of Mrs Howard to take the leading part in a new play. I went to the opening of that play, too, and I had a feeling first of surprise, 4* 99 и!
then of gratification, at seeing Carol’s name so large on the billboards. Even though we were completely broken apart, I suppose I was still being influenced by the faith I had put in her talent and was pleased to see it justified so soon. The producers had cast her shrewdly. She played a young girl who was sweet and pathetic for two and a half acts and turned out at the end to be a bitch. They had cast not only her qualities but her reputa- tion, and she couldn’t have been shown off to a better advantage. The curious thing was she didn’t quite come off. I don’t know why, but although she seemed to be doing everything right and performed with an assurance and confidence you rarely see in a girl that young, the final result was disappointing. The audience was polite enough and the reviews the next day were not bad, but the man who played opposite her and a middle-aged cha- racter woman who came on only in the second act re- ceived more attention than Carol. I thought all this would do her no harm and that in her next play or the one after, she would finally come into her own. But Charley Sinclair told me I was wrong. “She’s had it,” Charley said. “She had her chance and she muffed it.” “I didn’t think she was that bad,” I said. “She wasn’t bad,” Charley said, “she just wasn’t good enough to carry a play And now everybody knows it. Farewell.” “What will happen to her?” I asked. “This play will flop in three weeks,” he said, “and then, if she’s smart, she’ll go back, quick, to playing supporting parts. If she can get them. Only she won’t be that smart, because nobody is, and she’ll hang around waiting for a lead again, and some fool will give it to her and then they’ll really take off her hide and pin it to the wall and she’d better learn how to type and take shorthand or find some man and marry him.” The fact that everything worked out as Charley said it would, made me think more highly of his intel- ligence, although it didn’t make me like him any bet- ter. Carol did go into another play the following season and she did get merciless criticized. I didn’t go to see 100
her in the play, because I had met Doris by then and I felt there was no sense in looking for trouble. I never saw her, even by accident, and I didn’t come across her .name again in the theatrical news and I stopped seeing Charley Sinclair, so that by the time Carol called me that morning in my office, I had no notion of what she had been doing with herself. When I happened to think of her, I recognized there was still a painful and dangerous spot on my memory, and I deliberately turned to other things. I got to the Statler a little early and ordered a drink and watched the door. She came in exactly at two-thirty. She wore a beaver coat she hadn’t had when I used to see her every night, and a neat and rather expensive- looking blue suit. She looked exactly as beautiful as I remembered her, and I noticed that as she walked through the room toward my table, most of the other men in the room looked longingly at her. I didn’t kiss her or even shake her hand. I suppose I smiled and said hello, but all I rememberjg that I kept thinking she hadn’t changed as I awkwardly helped her take off her coat. We sat side by side, facing out to the room, and she ordered a cup of coffee. She never drank very much, and whatever the experiences of the past two years had done to her, they hadn’t pushed her to liquor. I turned on the banquette to look at her, and she smiled at me a little, knowing what I was doing, knowing I was search- ing her face for the marks of failure and regret. “Well,” she said. “How do you like it?” “The same,” I said. “The same.” She laughed a little,'soundlessly. "Poor Peter. ” I didn’t want to get started on that. “What’re you going to do in San Francisco?” I asked. She shrugged, carelessly. That, at least, was some- thing new, that gesture. “I don’t know,” she said. “Look for some kind of job. Hunt a husband. Reflect on my mistakes. ” “I’m sorry it turned out this way,” I said. 101
i, • • •• ' She shrugged again. "Hazards of the trade,” she said. She looked at her watch, and we both thought of the train that was waiting to take her away from the city after the seven years. “I didn’t come here to, cry on your shoulder,” she said. “There’s something I have to tell you about that night in Boston, to keep the record straight and I haven’t much time.” I sat, sipping at my drink, not looking at her, as she talked. She talked swiftly and without emotion, and never hesitated for a moment, as though every detail of what had happened that night would be clear in her memory, in its proper place, for the rest of her life. She had been alone in her room, she told me, when I called her from New York, and after she had spoken to me she had looked over some changes in her part. Then she had gone to sleep. When the knocking on the door awakened her, she lay still for a moment, first thinking she had been dream- ing, then thinking that whoever it was must have mistaken her room for someone else’s and would go away. But the knocking came again, light, guarded, per- sistent, unmistakable. She switched on the light and sat up in her bed. “Who is it?” she called. “Open the door, please, Carol.” It was a woman’s voice, low and urgent and muffled by the door. “It’s me, Eileen.” Eileen, Eileen, Carol thought, stupidly. I don’t know any Eileens. “Who?” she asked, still dulled by sleep. “Eileen Munsing,” came the whisper through the door. “Oh,” Carol said. “Miss Munsing.” She jumped out of bed, and barefooted, in her nightgown, with the curl- ers in her hair, she went over to the door and threw it open. Eileen Munsing brushed past her, knocking against her in her hurry. Carol closed the door and turned to face Eileen Mun- sing, standing next to the rumpled bed in the little room, her face blocked out * in sharp light and shadow by the single bedside lamp. She was a handsome woman of thirty-five who looked like a handsome woman of 102
thirty on the stage and a handsome woman of forty off the stage. The on-stage subtraction of five years was due to the bold modeling of the bones of her face and head and an almost visible reservoir of animal energy. The off-stage addition of five years was due to drink, the bite of ambition, and according to report, a good deal of handling by men. She was dressed in the black jersey skirt and sweater Carol had observed on her when they came up in the elevator together after the show and said good night to each other in the corridor. The door to Eileen Mun- sing’s suite was about thirty feet away, across the cor- ridor from Carol’s room, on the front side of the hotel. Almost automatically Carol noticed Eileen Munsing was not drunk, her stockings were slightly twisted on her legs, a ruby pin she had been wearing on her shoul- der was no longer there. Also, her lipstick had just been put on, too lavishly and not quite accurately, and her wide mouth,' almost black in the harsh light, seemed to be sliding unsteadily off to one side of her face. “What is it?” Carol asked, trying to make her voice calm and soothing. “What’s the matter, Miss Munsing?” “I’m in trouble,” the woman whispered. Her voice was hoarse and frightened. "Bad, bad trouble. ... Who’s in the next room?” She turned her head suspiciously toward the wall next to the bed. “I don’t know,” said Carol. “Anybody from the company?” “No, Miss Munsing,” Carol said. “We’re the only ones from the company on this froor.” “Cut the Miss Munsing. I’m not your grandmother.” “Eileen,” Carol said. “That’s better,” said Eileen Munsing. She stood there, swaying slightly, staring at Carol as though she were slowly approaching a decision about her. Carol kept close to the door, feeling the knob in her back. “I need a friend,” Eileen said. “I need help.” “Anything I can do...” “Don’t be so sweet,” said Eileen. “I need real help.’’ Carol felt very cold now, in her bare feet and thin gown, and she shivered. She wished the woman would go away. 103
I “Put on something,” Eileen Munsing said, as though she had made her decision. “And come back with me to my room, please.” “It’s awfully late, Miss Munsing...” “Eileen.” “— Eileen. And I have to get up early tomorrow morning and —” “What’re you frightened of?” Eileen Munsing asked harshly. “I’m not frightened,” Carol said, lying. “It’s just that there doesn’t seem to be any reason — ” “There’s a reason,” said Eileen Munsing. “There’s a very good reason. There’s a dead man in my bed.” The man lay on the wide bed, on top of the blankets, his head turned a little on the pillow toward the door, his eyes open, an expression of almost smiling surprise on his face. His shirt and jacket were off, hung, with a solid navy-blue necktie, over the back of a chair, and one foot was bare. The other foot still had a sock on it, dribbled around the ankle, with a garter dangl- ing from it. A pair of black shoes, neatly arranged, stood on the floor, half under the bed. He was an enor- mous man, with a fat, swelling diaphragm and oysterish * skin, and he seemed too large, even for the big double bed. He was about fifty years old, with stiff gray hair, and even though he was dead and half-naked, he looked like a successful and important man who was used to ordering people around. Then Carol recognized him. Samuel Borensen. She had seen his photograph in the newspapers, and he had been pointed out to her in the lobby of the hotel two days before. “He was starting to get undressed,” Eileen Munsing said, staring bitterly at the bed, “and he said, ‘I feel a little funny. I think I’ll just lie down for a minute,* and then he died.” Carol turned her back to the bed. She didn’t want to look at the flabby, domineering corpse any more. She had put on a negligee over her nightgown and fleece- lined slippers, but she was colder than ever. She wanted to get out of the room and back into her own bed and 104
pull the covers up, warm, and not remember any more that anyone had ever knocked on her door. But Eileen Munsing barred the way, standing before the open door that led into the brightly lit living room of the large, Iwo-room suite, filled with flowers, bottles, baskets of fruit, telegrams, because she was a star opening in a play everybody thought was going to be a hit. “I’ve known him for ten years,” Eileen Munsing was saying, glaring past Carol at the bed. “We’ve been friends for ten years, and then he goes and does something like that.” “Maybe he’s not dead,” Carol said. “Have you called the doctor?” “A doctor!” Eileen Munsing laughed harshly. “That’s just what we need. What do you think would happen if I called a doctor at three o’clock in the morning and ho found Sam Borensen dead in Eileen Munsing’s bed- room? What do you think the papers would be like tomorrow?” “I’m sorry,” Carol said, keeping her eyes resolutely turned away from the body. “But I think I’d better just go back to my room. I won’t say anything and — ” “You can’t leave me alone," Eileen Munsing said, “I’ll jump out the window if you leave me alone.” “I’d love to help, if I could,” Carol said, having difficulty, because her throat was dry and seemed to be contracting in little, sharp spasms when she tried to talk. “But I don’t know what I could do...” “You can help me dress him,” Eileen Munsing said flatly, “and get him back to his room.” “Miss Munsing?” “He’s too big for me to handle,” Miss Munsing said. “I tried and I couldn’t even get his shirt on. He must weigh two hundred pounds. He ate too much,” she said fiercely, reproaching the still figure on the bed for all the appetites that had brought him to this place and left him there, intractable. “But between the two of us...” “Where’s his room?” Carol asked, fighting the spasms in her throat. “On the ninth floor.” “Miss Munsing,” Carol said, noticing she was still gasping. “We’re on the fifth floor. That’s four stories. 105
Even if I did help, what could we do? We couldn’t take him in the elevator — ” “I wasn’t thinking of the elevator," Eileen Munsing said. “We could carry him up the fire-escape stairs.” Carol made herself turn and look at the dead man. He bulked on the blankets, looking huge, immovable, making the bed sag in the middle. If she had to get mixed up in something like this, Carol thought, why couldn’t she pick a normal-size man. “Not a chance,” Carol said through the constricted throat. “The fire-escape stairs are way down at the other side of the building, and we never could carry him, we’d have to drag him.” Even as she spoke she was sur- prised at herself for working so naturally on the prob- lem, making herself responsible for joining, even in that limited way, the conspiracy. “We’d have to pass twenty rooms, dragging him, and somebody would be bound to hear or the night watchman would come by. And even if we got to the stairs, we’d never get him up even one flight — ” “We could leave him on the stairs,” Eileen Munsing said. “They wouldn’t find him until morning.” “You mustn’t talk like that.” “Well, what?” Eileen Munsing said wildly. “Don’t stand there grinning, telling me all the things I can’t do.” Carol touched her face, surprised, as though to test, with her fingers, the quality of expression. The effort of trying to talk through her fright and the dry spasms in her throat had contorted her mouth, and she supposed to Miss Munsing, in her state, it had looked like a smile. “Is there anybody else from the company on this floor?” Eileen Munsing asked. “Any men?” “No,” Carol said. Seward, the producer, had gone down to New York for two days, and the other men were at another hotel. “Mr Moss,” Carol said, hopefully, remembering, “is staying here, though.” Mr Moss was playing the male lead opposite Miss Munsing. “He hates me,” Eileen Munsing said. “He’s up on the tenth floor. Anyway, he’s with his wife.” Carol looked at the traveling clock on the bed table, next to the pale, half-smiling twisted face. It was nearly four o’clock. “I’ll go into my room and think, and if anything occurs to me I’ll — ” 106
She moved suddenly, and catching Eileen Munsing by suprise, fled past her into the living room. She was nl the door, fumbling with the knob, when Eileen Mun- sing caught her, clamping her fingers over Carol’s wrist. “Wait a minute. Please,” the woman begged. “You can’t leave me alone like this.” “I don’t know what I can possibly do, Miss Munsing,” Carol said, panting as though she had been running for a long time, although here, in the brightly lit living room with the bowls of flowers and the baskets of fruit, she was in better control of herself. “I would really like to help, if I could. But I — ” “Listen,’’Eileen Munsing whispered, holding her. “Don’t get hysterical. There’s plenty to do. Come on over here, she said soothingly, leading Carol to the couch. “Sit down. Be1 sensible. There’s plenty of time. We don’t have to lose our heads.” Carol let herself be guided to the couch. She wanted to say she was sorry but it was none of her business, she hadn’t invited a famous man with a bad heart to her bedroom at three in the morning, she hadn’t been friends for ten years with a man who had a wife and two children in Palm Beach. But she was both frightened of Eileen Munsing and sorry for her, and she couldn’t bring herself to leave her alone in the welter of flowers, telegrams, ruin, scandal. “Do you want a drink?” Eileen Munsing asked. “I think we can both use a drink.” “Yes, please.” The actress poured two stiff whiskeys and gave one to Carol. I am a very good friend of Eileen Munsing’s, Carol thought foolishly, we often sit in her room after the show to all hours, drinking and talking about theat- rical problems, I owe a great deal of my present success to the hints I ... “Listen, Carol,” Eileen Munsing said, sitting beside her, “there’s one thing for sure — he can’t be found here.” “No,” Carol said stupidly, for a confused moment being Eileen Munsing and realizing the impossibility of having Samuel Borensen found dead in her room. “But —” “I can’t stand it,” Eileen Munsing said. “This would finish me. There was enough of a stink about my second divorce.” 107
Vaguely, Carol remembered newspaper stories about detectives, a diary, pictures taken with a telephoto lens and shown in court, and the automobile accident a few years before that, on the highway from Mexico, and the laborer who had been run over coming out of a dirt road and the police finding out the man driving the car was drunk and not Eileen Munsing’s husband at all (the first, the second, the third?) although they had spent three days and nights under a name that belonged to neither of them in a hotel at Ensenada. “They had to hold up releasing my pictures for more than a year,” Eileen Munsing was saying, drinking in gulps, her hands working bonily on the glass, “and it looked as though they’d never take me back. If this comes out,” she said bitterly, “every woman’s club in the country will vote to have me burned. Lord,” she said, overcome with self-pity, “every time I make a move it blows up in my face. I’ve used it all up,” she said. “I’ve used up everybody’s forgiveness. Everything hap- pens at the wrong time.” She drank thirstily, mechanically. “If something like this had happened when I was just starting, it would have been all right. It would’ve been better than all right — it would have helped. If I were a young girl starting in,” Eileen Munsing went on, her bitter, hoarse voice whispering in the large, plush room, “people’d say, ‘Well, you can’t blame her too much — she’s just a young girl on her own. Natu- rally, a man like that could talk her into anything.’ And they’d be interested in me, they’d be curious about me, they’d talk about me, they’d want to see me. Lord,” she said extravagantly, “if it had happened fifteen years ago, it would have been better than a trunkful of rave reviews. ” Carol stood up. She wasn’t cold any more, and the spasms in her throat had stopped. She looked down calmly at Eileen Munsing, sympathetic, linked, sisterly, understanding. “Eileen,” she said, the name for the first time coming naturally to her lips, thinking. This is the moment. Who would have ever thought it was going to come like this? “Eileen,” she said, putting her drink down and taking the older woman’s hands, soothing, sisterly, in hers, “don’t worry. I think there’s something that can be done.” 108
Eileen Munsing looked up at her, suspicious, not understanding. “What?” she said, her hands cold and limp in Carol’s. “I think,” Carol said, her voice steady, reassuring, "we’d better get started if we want to get him into my room before daylight.” The calm, remembering, melodious voice stopped. Once more we were back in the Statler bar, two years past the remembered night. We sat in silence for a moment. 1 because I was too confused and shaken to speak, Carol be- cause the story, as far as she was concerned, was complete. “The truth is,” she said, after the pause, “everything worked out exactly as we planned. The only trouble was I miscalculated. I thought I was better than I was, that’s all. Well, who doesn’t make a mistake now and I hen?” She looked at her watch and stood up. “I have to go.” I helped her on with her coat, and walked to the door with her. “One thing,” I said. “Why did you finally tell me this?” She looked at me candidly, sweetly, standing there al the open door with the traffic of the city behind her. “We probably will never see each other again,” she said, “and I wanted to let you know I hadn’t been unfaith- ful to you. I wanted you to be left with a good opinion of me.” She leaned over and kissed my cheek and started across the avenue, youthful, delicate, beautiful, dement- ed — looking, with her pretty suit and soft fur coat and her shining fresh blond hair, as though she were setting out to conquer the city.
FOR DISCUSSION I 1. State the theme of the story and give your own opinion of the idea the author wanted to convey. 2. How does the author alter the chronological system of narration? What is the function of such alteration? 3. Can you separate the narrative into various parts, isolating one section as the central episode; another as the prelude, or prepa- ration; another as the postlude, or explanation? 4. What is the climax of the story? Explain why. 5. Which portions present information necessary for the appre- ciation of the action? How does the author arrange the presentation of this information? 6. We learn about the characters from what the author tells about them directly, by what they do and say, and by what other characters say about them. Explain how these methods are used in the story to describe Carol Hunt. 7. Speak of Carol Hunt’s theatrical career. What was the reason of her sudden success and why didn’t she come off afterwards? 8. What details does the author give us that reveal Carol’s i character? 9. What characteristic of Carol is the most prominent? Does it explain the decision she took in Boston? 10. Show how the author prepared the reader for the outcome of the story. 11. Does the narrator’s own personality enter into the account? Does it play an important role in the story?
Tennessee Williams PORTRAIT OF A GIRL IN GLASS We lived in a third floor apartment on Maple Street in Saint Louis,* on a block which also contained the Ever-ready Garage, a Chinese laundry, and a bookie shop disguised as a cigar store. Mine was an anomalous character, one that appeared to be slated * for radical change or disaster, for I was a poet who had a job in a warehouse. As for my sister Laura, she could be classified even less readily than I. She made no positive motion toward the world but stood at the edge of the water, so to speak, with feet that anticipated too much cold to move. She’d never have budged an inch, I’m pretty sure, if my mother who was a relatively aggressive sort of woman had not 111
shoved her roughly forward, when Laura was twenty years old, by enrolling her as a student in a nearby business college. Out of her “magazine money” (she sold subscriptions to women’s magazines), Mother had paid my sister’s tuition for a term of six months. It did not work out. Laura tried to memorize the type- writer keyboard, she had a chart at home, she used to sit silently in front of it for hours, staring at it while she cleaned and polished her infinite number of little glass ornaments. She did this every evening after dinner. Mother would caution me to be very quiet. “Sister is looking at her typewriter chart!” I felt somehow that it would do her no good, and I was right. She would seem to know the position of the keys until the weekly speed-drill got under way, and then they would fly from her mind like a bunch of startled birds. At last she couldn’t bring herself to enter the school any more. She kept this failure a secret for a while. She left the house each morning as before and spent six hours walking around the park. This was in February, and all the walking out-doors regardless of weather brought on influenza. She was in bed for a couple of weeks with a curiously happy little smile on her face. Of course Mother phoned the business college to let them know she was ill. Whoever was talking on the other end of the line had some trouble, it seems, in remem- bering who Laura was, which annoyed my mother and she spoke up pretty sharply. “Laura has been attending that school of yours for two months, you certainly ought to recognize her name!” Then came the stunning dis- closure. The person sharply retorted, after a moment or two, that now she did remember the Wingfield girl, and that she had not been at the business college once in about a month. Mother’s voice became strident. Another person was brought to the phone to verify the statement of the first. Mother hung up and went to Laura’s bedroom where she lay with a tense and fright- ened look in place of the faint little smile. Yes, admitted my sister, what they said was true. “I couldn’t go any longer, it scared me too much, it made me sick at the stomach!” After this fiasco, my sister stayed at home and kept in her bedroom mostly. This was a narrow room that 112
had two windows on a dusky areaway between two wings of the building. We called this areaway Death Valley for a reason that seems worth telling. There were a great many alley-cats * in the neighborhood and one par- ticularly vicious dirty white Chow who stalked them continually. In the open or on the fire-escapes they could usually elude him but now and again he cleverly con- trived to run some youngster among them into the cul- de-sac of this narrow areaway at the far end of which, directly beneath my sister’s bedroom windows, they made the blinding discovery that what had appeared Io be an avenue of escape was really a locked arena, a gloomy vault of concrete and brick with walls too high for any cat to spring, in which they must suddenly turn to spit at their death until it was hurled upon them. Hardly a week went by without a repetition of this violent drama. The areaway had grown to be hateful Io Laura because she could not look out on it without i ecalling the screams and the snarls of killing. She kept the shades drawn down, and as Mother would not permit the use of electric current except when needed, her days wore spent almost in perpetual twilight. There were three pieces of dingy ivory furniture in the room, a bed, a bureau, a chair. Over the bed was a remarkably bad religious painting, a very effiminate head of Christ with teardrops visible just below the eyes. The charm of the room was produced by my sister’s collection of glass. She loved colored glass and had covered the walls with shelves of little glass articles, all of them light ami delicate in color. These she washed and polished with endless care. When you entered the room there was always this soft, transparent radiance in it which came from the glass absorbing whatever faint light came through the shades on Death Valley. I have no idea how many articles there were of this delicate glass. There must have been hundreds of them. But Laura could tell you exactly. She loved each one. She lived in a world of glass and also a world of music. The music came from a 1920 victrola * and a bunch of records that dated from about the same period, pieces such as Whispering or The Love Nest or Dardanella. These records were souvenirs of our father, a man whom wo barely remembered, whose name was spoken rarely. б И. В. Ступников 113
Before his sudden and unexplained disappearance from our lives, he had made this gift to the household, the phonograph and the records, whose music remaified as a sort of apology for him. Once in a while, on pay- day at the warehouse, I would ))ririg home a new record. But Laura seldom cared, for these new records, maybe because they reminded her too much of the noisy trage- dies in Death Valley or the speed-drills at the business college. The tunes she loved were the ones she had always heard. Often she sang to herself at night in her bedroom. Her voice was thin, it usually wandered off-key. Yet it had a curious childlike sweetness. At eight o’clock in the evening I sat down to write in my own mouse- trap of a room. Through the closed doors, through the walls, I would hear my sister singing to herself, a piece like Whispering or I Love You or Sleepy Time Gal, losing the tune now and then but always preserving the minor atmosphere of the music. I think that was why I always wrote such strange and sorrowful poems in those days. Because I had in my ears the wispy sound of my sister serenading her pieces of colored glass, washing them while she sang or merely looking down at them with her vague blue eyes until the points of gem-like radiance in them gently drew the aching particles of reality from her mind and finally produced a state of hypnotic calm in which she even stopped singing or washing the glass and merely sat without motion until my mother knocked at the door and warned her against the waste of electric current. I don’t believe that my sister was actually foolish. I think the petals of her mind had simply closed through fear, and it’s no telling how much they had closed upon in the way of secret wisdom. She never talked very much, not even to me, but once in a while she did pop out with something that took you by surprise. After work at the warehouse or after I’d finished my writing in the evening, I’d drop in her room for a little visit because she had a restful and soothing effect on nerves that, were worn rather thin from trying to rido two horses simultaneously in two opposite directions.* I usually found her seated in the straight-back ivory chair with a piece of glass cupped tenderly in her palm. “What are you doing? Talking to it?” I asked. 114
“No,” she answered gravely, “I was just looking nt it.” ' ' On the bureau were two pieces of fiction which she had received as Christmas or birthday presents. One was a novel called the Rose-Garden Husband by someone whose name escapes me. The other was Freckles by Gene Stratton Porter.*! never saw her reading the Rose-Garden Husband, but the other book was one that she actually lived with. It had probably never occurred to Laura that a book was something you read straight through and then laid aside as finished. The character Freckles, a one-armed orphan youth who worked in a lumber- camp, was someone that she invited into her bedroom now and then for a friendly visit just as she did me. When I came in and found this novel open upon her lap, she would gravely remark that Freckles was having some trouble with the foreman of the lumber-camp or that he had just received an injury to his spipe- when a tree fell on him. She frowned with genuine sorrow when she reported these misadventures of her story-book hero, possibly not recalling how successfully he came through them all, that the injury to the spine fortuitously resulted in the discovery of rich parents and that the bad-tempered foreman had a heart of gold at the end of the book. Freckles became involved in romance with a girl he called The Angel, but my sister usually stopped reading when this girl became too prominent in the story. She closed the book or turned back to the lonelier periods in the orphan’s story. I only remember her making one reference to this heroine of the novel. ‘The Angel is nice,” she said, “but seems to be kind of conceited about her looks.” Then one time at Christmas, while she was trimming the artificial tree, she picked up the Star of Bethlehem * that went on the topmost branch and held it gravely toward the chandelier. “Do stars have five points really?” she enquired. This was the sort of thing you didn’t believe and that made you stare at Laura with sorrow and confu- sion. “No,” I told her, seeing she really meant it, “they’re round like the earth and most of them much bigger.” 6* 115
She was gently surprised by this new information. She went to the window to look up at the sky which was, as usual during Saint Louis winters, completely shrouded by smoke. “It’s hard to tell,” she said, and returned to the tree. So time passed on till my sister was twenty-three. Old enough to be married, but the fact of the matter was she had never even had a date with a boy. I don’t believe this seemed as awful to her as it did to Mother. At breakfast one morning Mother said to me, “Why don’t you cultivate some nice young friends? How about down at the warehouse? Aren’t there some young men down there you could ask to dinner?” This suggestion surprised me because there was sel- dom quite enough food on her table to satisfy three people. My mother was a terribly stringent housekeeper, God knows we were poor enough in actuality, but my mother had an almost obsessive dread of becoming even poorer. A not unreasonable fear since the man of the house was a poet who worked in a warehouse, but one which I thought played too important a part in all her calculations. Almost immediately Mother explained herself. “I think it might be nice,” she said, “for your sister.” I brought Jim home to dinner a few nights later. Jim was a big red-haired Irishman who had the scrubbed and polished look of well-kept chinaware. His big square hands seemed to have a direct and very innocent hunger for touching his friends. He was always clapping them on your arms or shoulders and they burned through the cloth of your shirt like plates taken out of an oven. He was the best-liked man in the warehouse and oddly enough he was the only one that I was on good terms with. He found me agreeably ridiculous I think. He knew of my secret practice of retiring to a cabinet in the lavatory and working on rhyme schemes when work was slack in the warehouse, and of sneaking up on the roof now and then to smoke my cigarette with a view across the river at the undulant * open country of Illi- nois. No doubt I was classified as screwy in Jim’s mind 116
ns much as in the others’, but while their attitude was suspicious and hostile when they first knew me, Jim’s was warmly tolerant from the beginning. He called me Slim, and gradually his cordial acceptance drew the others around, and while he remained the only one who actually had anything to do with me, the others had now begun to smile when they saw me as people smile at an oddly fashioned dog who crosses their path at some distance. Nevertheless it took some courage for me to invite Jim to dinner. I thought about it all week and delayed the action till Friday noon, the last possible moment, as the dinner was set for that evening. “What are you doing tonight?” I finally asked him. “Not a God damn thing,” said Jim. “I had a date but her Aunt took sick and she’s hauled her freight * to Centralia!” * “Well,” I said, “why don’t you come over for din- ner?” “Sure!” said Jim. He grinned with astonishing bright- ness. I went outside to phone the news to Mother. Her voice that was never tired responded with an energy that made the wires crackle. “I suppose he’s Catholic?” she said. “Yes,” I told her, remembering the tiny silver cross on his freckled chest. “Good!” she said. “I’ll bake a salmon loaf!”* And so we rode home together in his jalopy. I had a curious feeling of guilt and apprehension as I led the lamb-like Irishman up three flights of cracked marble steps to the door of Apartment F, which was not thick enough to hold inside it the odor of baking salmon. Never having a key, I pressed the bell. “Laura!” came Mother’s voice. “That’s Tom and Mr Delaney! Let them in!” There was a long, long pause. “Laura?” she called again. “I’m busy in the kitchen, you answer the door!” Then at last I heard my sister’s footsteps. They went right past the door at which we were standing and into 117
,the parlor. I heard the creaking noise of the phonograph irank. Music commenced. One of the oldest records, a march of Sousa’s,* put on to give her the courage to let in a stranger. The door came timidly open and there she stood in a dress from Mother’s wardrobe, a black chiffon ankle- length and high-heeled slippers on which she balanced uncertainly like a tipsy crane of melancholy plumage. Her eyes stared back at us with a glass brightness and her delicate wing-like shoulders were hunched with nervousness. “Hello!” said Jim, before I could introduce him. He stretched out his hand. My sister touched it only for a second. “Excuse me!” she whispered, and turned with a breath- less rustle back to her bedroom door, the sanctuary beyond it briefly revealing itself with the tinkling, muted radiance of glass before the door closed rapidly but gently on her wraithlike figure. Jim seemed to be incapable of surprise. “Your sister?” he asked. “Yes, that was her,” I admitted. “She’s terribly shy with strangers.” “She looks like you,” said Jim, “except she’s pretty.” Laura did not reappear till called to dinner. Her place was next to Jim at the drop-leaf table and all through the meal her figure was slightly tilted away from his. Her face was feverishly bright and one eyelid, the one on the side toward Jim, had developed a nerv- ous wink. Three times in the course of the dinner sho dropped her fork on her plate with a terrible claUer and she was continually raising the water-glass to he? lips for hasty little gulps. Shp went on doing this even after the water was gone from the glass. And her handl- ing of the silver became more awkward and hurried all the time. I thought of nothing to say. To Mother belonged the conversational honors, such as they were. She asked the caller about his home and family. She was delighted to learn that his father had a business of his own, a retail shoe store somewhere in Wyoming.* The news that he went to night-school 418
io study accounting was still more edifying.* . What' was his heart set on beside the warehouse? Radio-engi- neering? My, my, my! It was easy to see that here was n very up-and-coming young man who was certainly going to make his place in the world! Then she started to talk about her children. Laura, she said, was not cut out Tor business. She was domestic, however, and making a home was really a girl’s best bet. Jim agreed with all this and seemed not to sense the ghost of an implication. I suffered through it dumbly, trying not to see Laura trembling more and more beneath the incredible unawareness of Mother. And bad as it .was, excruciating in fact, I thought with dread of the moment when dinner was going to be over, for then the diversion of food would be taken away, we would have to go into the little steam-heated parlor. I fancied the four of us having run out of talk, even Mother’s seemingly endless store of questions about Jim’s home and his job all used up finally — the four of us, then, just sitting there in the parlor, listening to the hiss of the radiator and nervously clearing our throats in the kind of self-consciousness that gets to be suffocating. But when the blanc-mange * was finished, a miracle happened. Mother got up to clear the dishes away. Jim gave me a clap on the shoulders and said, “Hey, Slim, let’s go have a look at those old records in there!” He sauntered carelessly into the front room and flopped down on the floor beside the victrola. He began sorting through the collection of worn-out records and reading their titles aloud in a voice so hearty that it shot like beams of sunlight through the vapors of self- consciousness engulfing my sister and me. He was sitting directly under the floor-lamp and all at once my sister jumped up and said to him, “Oh — you have freckles!” Jim grinned. “Sure that’s what my folks call me — Freckles!” “Freckles?” Laura repeated. She looked toward me as if for the confirmation of some too wonderful hope. I looked away quickly, not knowing whether to feel 119 .
relieved or alarmed at the turn that things were taking. Jim had wound the victrola and put on Darda- nella. He grinned at Laura. “How about you an* me cutting the rug * a little?” “What?” said Laura breathlessly, smiling and smiling. “Dance!” he said, drawing her into his arms. As far as I knew she had never danced in her life. But to my everlasting wonder she slipped quite naturally into those huge arms of Jim’s, and they danced round and around the small steam-heated parlor, bumping against the sofa and chairs and laughing loudly and happily together. Something opened up in my sister’s face. To say it was love is not too hasty a judgment, for after all he had freckles and that was what his folks called him. Yes, he had undoubtedly assumed the iden- tity — for all practical purposes — of the one-armed orphan youth who lived in the Limberlost, that tall and misty region to which she retreated whenever tho walls of Apartment F became too close to endure. Mother came back in with some lemonade. She stopped short as she entered the portieres. “Good heavens! Laura? Dancing?” Her look was absurdly grateful as well as startled. “But isn’t she stepping all over you, Mr Delaney?” “What if she does?” said Jim, with bearish gallantry. “I’m not made of eggs!” “Well, well, well!” said Mother, senselessly bea- ming. “She’s light as a feather!” said Jim. “With a little more practice she’d dance as good as Betty!” There was a little pause of silence. “Betty?” said Mother. “The girl I go out with!” said Jim. “Oh!” said Mother. She set the pitcher of lemonade carefully down and with her back to the caller and her eyes on me, she asked him just how often he and the lucky young lady went out together. “Steady!” said Jim. Mother’s look, remaining on my lace, turned into a glare of fury. 120
“Tom didn’t mention that you went out with a girl!” “Nope,” said Jim. “I didn’t mean to let the cat out of the bag.* The boys at the warehouse’ll kid me to death when Slim gives the news away.” He laughed heartily but his laughter dropped heavily and awkwardly away as even his dull senses were gradu- ally penetrated by the unpleasant sensation the news of Betty had made. “Are you thinking of getting married?” said Mother. “First of next month!” he told her. It took her several moments to pull herself together. Then she said in a dismal tone, "How nice! If Tom had only told us we could have asked you bothl” Jim had picked up his coat. “Must you be going?” said Mother. “I hope it don’t seem like I’m rushing off,” said Jim, “but Betty’s gonna get back on the eight o’clock train an’ * by the time I get my jalopy down to the Wabash depot — ” “Oh, then, we mustn’t keep you.” Soon as he’d left, we all sat down, looking dazed. Laura was the first to speak. “Wasn’t he nice?” she said. “And all those freckles!” “Yes,” said Mother. Then she turned on me. “You didn’t mention that he was engaged to be mar- ried!” “Well, how did I know that he was engaged to be married?” “I thought you called him your best friend down at the warehouse?” “Yes, but I didn’t know he was going to be married!” “How peculiar!” said Mother. “How very peculiar!" “No,” said Laura gently, getting up from the sofa. “There’s nothing peculiar about it.” She picked up one of the records and blew on its surface a little as if it were dusty, then set it softly back down. “People in love,” she said, “take everything for grant- ed.” What did she mean by that? I never knew. She slipped quietly back to her room and closed the door. 121
Not very long after that I lost my job at the ware- ' house. .1 was fired for writing a poem on the lid of a shoe- .. box. I left Saint Louis and took to moving around. The cities swept about me like dead leaves, leaves that were brightly colored but torn away from the branches. My nature changed. I grew to be firm and sufficient. In five years* time I had nearly forgotten home. I had to forget it, I couldn’t carry it with me. But once ' in a while, usually in a strange town before I have found \ companions, the shell of deliberate hardness is broken through. A door comes softly and irresistibly open. I hear the tired old music my unknown father left in the place he abandoned as faithlessly as I. I see the faint and sorrowful radiance of the glass, hundreds of little transparent pieces of it in very delicate colors. 1 hold my breath, for if my sister’s face appears among them — the night is hers! V: < lay йю № FOR DISCUSSION 1. How is your interest in the story influenced by the fact that it is told in the first person? 2. Who tells the story? What idea do you have of the teller’s personality? What is his attitude toward Laura? 3. What impressions of Laura does the author manage to create? Why are they so sorrowful? Point out the details that contrib- ute to these impressions. Do the details seem random, or do they seem organized around selected topics (e. g., environment, family associations, etc.)? 4. Explain what aspects of Laura’s personality might make it difficult tor her to adjust to the world. Why did she live in the world invented by herself? 5. Was Jim’s visit important for Laura? In what way could it influence her? 122
6. Discuss the importance of setting to this story. Show tho ways in which the setting is designed to carry but the author’s' intentions with regard to the plot and the characters of the story. Show why a change in the setting would seriously impair or alter tho story. 7. Which of the descriptive details have as primary purpose tho creation of a visualized setting? Which produce an emotional reaction? 8. Can the description be focused around a single general statement? If not, what are the individual ideas the author wants to suggest to the reader? 9. Is a psycological tension.that focuses the reader’s interest created? At which point is it at its height? 10. Speak of Laura’s mother. 11. What is the attitude of the author toward the characters of the story? 12. Discuss the theme of the story.
Muriel Spark THE BLACK MADONNA When the Black Madonna was installed in the Church of the Sacred Heart the Bishop himself came to conse- crate it. His long purple train was upheld by the two curliest of the choir. The day was favoured suddenly with thin October sunlight as he crossed the courtyard from the presbytery to the church, as the procession followed him chanting the Litany of the Saints: five priests in vestments of white heavy silk interwoven with glinting threads, four lay officials with straight red robes, then the confraternities and the tangled columns of the Moth- ers’ Union. The new town of Whitney Clay had a large propor- tion of Roman Catholics, especially among the nurses 124
at the new hospital; and at the paper mills, too, there were many Catholics, drawn inland from Liverpool hy the new housing estate; likewise, with the canning factories. The Black Madonna had been given to the church by a recent convert. It was carved out of bog oak. “They found the wood in the bog. Had been there hundreds of years. They sent for the sculptor right away by phone. He went over to Ireland and carved it there and then. You see, he had to do it while it was still wet.” “Looks a bit like contemporary art.” “Nah,* that’s not contemporary art, it’s old-fashioned. If you’d ever seen contemporary work you’d know it was old-fashioned.” “Looks like contemp — ” “It’s old-fashioned. Else how’d it get sanctioned to be put up?” “It’s not so nice as the Immaculate Conception * at Lourdes.* That lifts you up.” Everyone got used, eventually, to the Black Madonna with her square hands and straight carved draperies. There was a movement to dress it up in vestments, or at least a lace veil. “She looks a bit gloomy, Father, don’t you think?” “No,” said the priest, “I think it looks fine. If you start dressing it up in cloth you’ll spoil the line.” . Sometimes people came from London especially to see the Black Madonna, and these were not Catho- lics; they were, said the priest, probably no religion at all, poor souls, though gifted with faculties. They came, as if to a museum, to see the line of the Black Madonna which must not be spoiled by vestments. The new town of Whitney Clay had swallowed up the old village. One or two cottages with double dormer windows, an inn called The Tyger, a Methodist chapel, and three small shops represented the village; the three shops were already threatened by the Council; the Methodists were fighting to keep their chapel. Only the double dormer cottages and the inn were protected by the Nation and so had to be suffered by the Town Planning Committee. 125
и .'•5 The town was laid out like geometry in squares, arcs (to allow for the by-pass), and isosceles triangles, ” breaking off, at one point, to sliirt the old village which, from the aerial view, looked like a merry doodle * on the page. Manders Road was. one side of a parallelogram of , green-bordered streets. It was named after one of the founders of the canning concern,.Manders’ Figs in Syrup, and it comprised a row of shops and a long high block ; of flats named Cripps House after the late Sir Stafford ’ Cripps who had laid the foundation stone. In flat twenty- j two on the fifth floor of Cripps House lived Raymond and Lou Parker. Raymond Parker was a foreman at the .: motor works, and was on the management committee. He had been married for fifteen years to Lou, who was thirty-seven at the time that the miraculous powers of the Black Madonna came to be talked of. Of the twenty-five couples who live in Cripps House five were Catholics. All, except Raymond and Lou Parker, had children. A sixth family had recently been ; moved by the Council into one of the six-roomed houses '• because of the seven children besides the grandfather. Raymond and Lou were counted lucky to have ob- -i tained their three-roomed flat although they had no chil- dren. People with children had priority; but their name had been on the waiting list for years, and some said Raymond had a pull with one of the Councillors who was a director of the motor works. The Parkers were among the few tenants of Cripps House who owned a motor-car. They did not, like most of their neighbours, have a television receiver, from being childless they had been able to afford to expand themselves in the way of taste, so that their habits differed slightly and their amusements considerably, from those of their neighbours. The Parkers went to the 1 pictures only when the Observer * had praised the film, < they considered television not their sort of thing; they adhered to their religion; they voted Labour; they be- lieved that the twentieth century was the best so far; they assented to the doctrine of original sin; they frequently applied the word “Victorian” * to ideas and people they did not like — for instance, when a local Town Coun- ! cillor resigned his office Raymond said, “He had to go. 3 126
lie’s Victorian. And far too young for the job”; and Lou said Jane Austen’s* books were too. Victorian; and anyone who opposed the abolition of capital punish- ment was Victorian. Raymond took the Reader’s Digest,* a magazine called Motoring and the Catholic Herald. Lou took the Queen, Woman’s Own,* and Life* Their daily paper was the News Chronicle.* They read two books apiece each week. Raymond preferred travel books; Lou liked novels. For the first five years of their married life they had been worried about not having children. Both had submitted themselves to medical tests as a result of which Lou had a course of injections. These were unsuc- cessful. It had been a disappointment since both came from large sprawling. Catholic families. None of their married brothers and sisters had less than three chil- dren. One of Lou’s sisters, now widowed, had eight; they sent her a pound a week. Their flat in Cripps House had three rooms and a kitchen. All round them their neighbours were saving up to buy houses. A council flat, once obtained, was a mere platform in space to further the progress of the rocket. This ambition was not shared by Raymond and Lou; they were not only content, they were de- lighted, with these civic * chambers, and indeed took something of an aristocratic view of them, not without a self-conscious feeling of being free, in this particular, from the prejudices of that middle class, to which they as good as belonged. “One day,” said Lou, “it will be the thing to live in a council flat.” They were eclectic as to their friends. Here, it is true, they differed slightly from each other. Raymond was for inviting the Ackleys to meet the Farrells. Mr Ackley was an accountant at the Electricity Board. Mr and Mrs Farrell were respectively a sorter at Manders* Figs in Syrup and an usherette at the Odeon.* “After all,” argued Raymond, “they’re all Catholics.” “Ah well,” said Lou, “but now, their interests are different. The Farrells wouldn’t know what the Ackleys were talking about. The Ackleys like politics.The Far- rells like to tell jokes. I’m not a snob, only sensible.” “Oh, please yourself.” For no one could call Lou a snob, and everyone knew she was sensible. 12’
Their choice of acquaintance was wide by reason of their active church membership: that is to say, they were members of various guilds and confraternities. Raymond was a sideman, and he also organized the weekly football lottery in aid of the Church Decoration Fund. Lou felt rather out of things when the Mothers' Union met and had special Masses, for the Mothers' Union was the only group she did not qualify for. Having been a nurse before her marriage she was, how- ever, a member of the Nurses’ Guild. Thus, most of their Catholic friends came from dif- ferent departments of life. Others, connected with the motor works where Raymond was a foreman, were of different social grades to which Lou was more alive than Raymond. He let her have her way, as a rule, when it came to a question of which would mix with which. A dozen Jamaicans were taken on at the motor works. Two came into Raymond’s department. He invited them to the flat one evening to have coffee. They were unmarried, very polite and black. The quiet one was called Henry Pierce and the talkative one, Oxford St John. Lou, to Raymond’s surprise and pleasure, decided that all their acquaintance, from top to bottom, must meet Henry and Oxford. All along he had known she was not a snob, only sensible, but he had rather feared she would consider the mixing of their new black and their old white friends not sensible. “I’m glad you like Henry and Oxford,” he said. “I’m glad we’re able to introduce them to so many people.” For the dark pair had, within a month, spent nine eve- nings at Cripps House; they had met accountants, teachers, packers, and sorters. Only Tina Farrell, the usherette, had not seemed to understand the quality of these occa- sions: “Quite nice chaps, them darkies, when you get to know them.” “You mean Jamaicans,” said Lou. “Why shouldn’t they be nice? They’re no different from anyone else.” “Yes , yes, that’s what I mean,” said Tina. “We’re all equal,” stated Lou. “Don’t forget there are black Bishops.” “Jesus, I never said we were the equal of a Bishop,” Tina said, very bewildered. 128
“Well, don’t call them darkies." Sometimes, on summer Sunday afternoons Raymond and Lou took their friends for a run in their car, ending up at a riverside road-house. The first time they turned up with Oxford and Henry they felt defiant; but there were no objections, there was no trouble at all. Soon the dark pair ceased to be a novelty. Oxford St John took up with a pretty red-haired book-keeper, and Henry Pierce, missing his companion, spent more of his time at the Parkers’ flat. Lou and Raymond had planned lo spend their two weeks’ summer holiday in London. “Poor Henry,” said Lou. “He’ll miss us.” Once you brought him out he was not so quiet as you thought at first. Henry was twenty-four, desirous of knowledge in all fields, shining very much in eyes, skin, teeth, which made him seen all the more eager. He called out the maternal in Lou, and to some extent the avuncular in Raymond. Lou used to love him when he read out lines from his favourite poems which he had copied into an exercise book. Haste thee, nymph, and bring with thee Jest and youthful jollity, Sport that...* Lou would interrupt: “You should say jest, jollity — not yest, yollity.” “Jest,” he said carefully. “And laughter holding both his sides,” he continued. “Laughter — hear that, Lou? — laughter. That’s what the human race was made for. Those folks that go round gloomy, Lou, they...” Lou loved this talk. Raymond puffed his pipe benign- ly. After Henry had gone Raymond would say what a pity it was such an intelligent young fellow had lapsed. For Henry had been brought up in a Roman Catholic mission. He had, however, abandoned religion. He was fond of saying, “The superstition of today is the science of yesterday.” “I can’t allow,” Raymond would say, “that the Catholic Faith is superstition. I can’t allow that.” “He’ll return to the Church one day” — this .was Lou’s contribution, whether Henry was present or not. If she said it in front of Henry he would give her an angry look. These were the only occasions when Henry lost his cheerfulness and grew quiet again. 129
Raymond and Lou prayed for Henry, that he might regain his faith. Lou said her rosary three times a week before the Black Madonna. “He’ll miss us when we go on our holidays.” Raymond telephoned to the hotel in London. “Have you a single room for a young gentleman accompanying Mr and Mrs Parker?” He added, “a coloured gentleman.” To his pleasure a room was available, and to his relief there was no objection to Henry’s colour. They enjoyed their London holiday, but it was some- what marred by a visit to that widowed sister of Lou’s to whom she allowed a pound a week towards the rearing of her eight children. Lou had not seen her sister Elizabeth for nine years. They went to her one day towards the end of their holiday. Henry sat at the back of the car beside a large suitcase stuffed with old clothes for Elizabeth. Raymond at the wheel kept saying, “Poor Elizabeth — eight kids,” which irritated Lou, though she kept her peace. Outside the Underground station at Victoria Park,* where they stopped to ask the way, Lou felt a strange sense of panic. Elizabeth lived in a very downward quar- ter of Bethnal Green, and in the past nine years since 'she had seen her Lou’s memory of the shabby ground- floor rooms with their peeling walls and bare boards, had made a kinder nest for itself. Sending off the postal order to her sister each week she had gradually come to picture the habitation at Bethnal Green in an almost monastic light; it would be bare but well-scrubbed, spotless, and shining with Brasso* and holy poverty. The floor boards gleamed. Elizabeth was grey-haired, lined, but neat. The children were well behaved, sitting down be- times to their broth in two rows along an almost refectory table. It was not till they had reached Victoria Park that Lou felt the full force of the fact that everything would be different from what she had imagined. “It may have gone down since I was last there,” she said to Raymond who had never visited Elizabeth before. “What’s gone down?” “Poor Elizabeth’s place.” Lou had not taken much notice of Elizabeth’s dull little monthly letters, almost illiterate, for Elizabeth, as she herself always said, was not much of a scholar. 130
James is at another job I hope thats the finish of tho bother I had my blood presiuro there was a Health visitor very nice. Also the assistance they sent my Dinner all the time and for the kids at home they call it meals on Wheels. I pray to the Almighty that James is well out of his bother he never lets on at sixteen their all the same never open his mouth but Gods eyes are not shut. Thanks for P. O. you will be rewarded your affect sister Elizabeth. Lou tried to piece together in her mind the gist of nine years’ such letters. James was the eldest; she supposed he had been in trouble. “I ought to have asked Elizabeth about young James,” said Lou. “She wrote to me last year that he was in a both- er, there was talk of him being sent away, but I didn’t take it in at the time, I was busy.” “You can't take everything on your shoulders,” said Raymond. “You do very well by Elizabeth.” They had pulled up outside the house where Elizabeth lived on the ground floor. Lou looked at the chipped paint, the dirty windows, and torn grey-white curtains and was reminded with startling clarity of her hopeless child- hood in Liverpool from which, miraculously, hope has lifted her, and had come true, for the nuns had got her that job; and she had trained as a nurse among white- painted beds, and white shining walls, and tiles, hot water everywhere, and Dettol * without stint. When she had first married she had wanted all white-painted furniture that you could wash and liberate from germs; but Raymond had been for oak, he did not understand the pleasure of hygiene and new enamel paint, for his upbringing had been orderly, he had been accustomed to a lounge suite and autumn tints in the front room all his life. And now Lou stood and looked at the outside of Elizabeth’s place and felt she had gone right back. On the way back to the hotel Lou chattered with re- lief that it was over. “Poor Elizabeth, she hasn’t had much of a chance. I liked little Francis, what did you think of little Francis, Ray?” 131
Raymond did not like being called Ray, but he made no objection for he knew that Lou had been under a strain. Elizabeth had not been very pleasant. She had expressed admiration for Lou’s hat, bag, gloves, and shoes which were all navy blue, but she had used an accusing tone. The house had been smelly and dirty. “I’ll show you round,” Elizabeth had said in a tone of mock refinement, and they were forced to push through a dark narrow passage behind her skinny form till they came to the big room where the children slept. A row of old iron beds each with a tumble of dark blanket rugs, no sheets. Raymond was indignant at the sight and hoped that Lou was not feeling upset. He knew very well Elizabeth had a decent living income from a number of public sources, and was simply a slut, one of those who would not help themselves. “Ever thought of taking a job, Elizabeth?” he had said, and immediately realized his stupidity. But Eliza- beth took her advantage. “What d’you mean? I'm not going to leave my kids in no nursery. I'm not going to send them to no home. What kids need these days is a good home-life and that’s what they get.” And she added, “God’s eyes are not shut,” in a tone which was meant for him, Raymond, to get at him for doing well ia life. Raymond distributed half-crowns to the younger children and deposited on the table half-crowns for those who were out playing in the street. “Goin’ already?” said Elizabeth in her tone of reproach. But she kept eyeing Henry with interest, and the re- proachful tone was more or less a routine affair. “You from the States?” Elizabeth said to Henry. Henry sat on the edge of his sticky chair and answered, no, from Jamaica, while Raymond winked at him to cheer him. “During the war there was a lot of boys like you from the States,” Elizabeth said, giving him a sideways look. Henry held out his hand to the second youngest child, a girl of seven, and said, “Come talk to me.” The child said nothing, only dipped into the box of sweets which Lou had brought. “Come talk,” said Henry. Elizabeth laughed. “If she does talk you’ll be sorry you ever asked. She’s got a tongue in her head,* that one. 132
Youshould hear her checking up to the teachers.” Eliza- beth’s bones jerked with laughter among her loose clothes. There was a lopsided double bed in the corner, and beside it a table cluttered with mugs, tins, a comb and brush, a number of hair curlers, a framed photograph of the Sacred Heart, and also Raymond noticed what 1 he thought erroneously to be a box of contraceptives. He decided to say nothing to Lou about this; he was quite sure she must have observed other things which he had not; possibly things of a more distressing nature. Lou’s chatter on the way back to the hotel had a touch of hysteria. “Raymond, dear,” she said in her most chirpy West End voice, “I simply had to give the poor dear all my next week’s housekeeping money. We shall have to starve, darling, when we get home. That’s simply what we shall have to do.” “О. K-,” said Raymond. “I ask you,” Lou shrieked, “what else could I do, what could I do?” “Nothing at all,” said Raymond, “but what you’ve done.” “My own sister, my dear,” said Lou; “and did you see the way she had her hair bleached? — All streaky, and she used to have a lovely head of hair.” “I wonder if she tries to raise herself?" said Raymond. “With all those children she could surely get better accom- modation if only she — ” “That sort,” said Henry, leaning forward from the back of the car, “never moves. It’s the slum mentality, man. Take some folks I’ve seen back home —” “There’s no comparison,” Lou snapped suddenly, “this is quite a different case.” Raymond glanced at her in surprise; Henry sat back, offended. Lou was thinking wildly, what a cheek him talking like a snob. At least Elizabeth’s white. Their prayers for the return of faith to Henry Pierce were so far answered in that he took a tubercular turn which was followed by a religious one. He was sent off io a sanatorium in Wales with a promise from Lou and Raymond to visit him before Christmas. Meantime, they applied themselves to Our Lady for the restoration of Henry’s health. 133
Cxford St John, whose love affair with the red-haired girl had come to grief, now frequented their flat, but he could never quite replace Henry in their affections. Oxford was older and less refined than Henry. He would stand.in front of the glass in their kitchen and tell him- self: “Man, you just a big black bugger.” He kept referring to himself as black, which of course he was, Lou thought, but it was not the thing to say. He stood in the doorway with his arms and smile thrown wide: “I am black but comely, О ye daughters of Jerusalem." And once, when Raymond was out, Oxford brought the conversation round to that question of being black all over, which made Lou very uncomfortable and she kept looking at the clock and dropped stitches in her knitting. Three times a week when she went to the black Our Lady with her rosary to ask for the health of Henry Pierce, she asked also that Oxford St John would get another job in another town, for she did not like to make objections, telling her feelings to Raymond; there were no objections to make that you could put your finger on. She could not very well complain that Oxford was common; Ray- mond despised snobbery, and so did she, it was a very delicate question. She was amazed when, within three weeks, Oxford announced that he was thinking of looking for a job in Manchester. Lou said to Raymond, “Do you know, there’s something in what they say about the bog-oak statue in the church.” “There may be,” said Raymond. “People say so.” Lou could not tell him how she had petitioned the removal of Oxford St John. But when she got a letter from Henry Pierce to say ho was improving, she told Raymond, “You see, we asked for Henry to get back the Faith, and so he did. Now we ask for his recovery and he’s improving.” “He’s having good treatment at the sanatorium,” Raymond said. But he added, “Of course we’ll have to keep up the prayers.” He himself, though not a rosary man, knelt before the Black Madonna every Saturday evening after Benediction to pray for Henry Pierce. Whenever they saw Oxford he was talking of leaving Whitney Clay. Raymond said, “He’s making a big mistake going to Manchester. A big place can be very lonely. I hope he’ll change’his mind.” 134
“He won’t,” said Lou, so impressed was she now by the powers of the Black Madonna. She was good and tired* of Oxford St John with his feet up on her cushions, and calling himself a nigger. “We’ll miss him,” said Raymond, “he’s such a cheery big soul.” “We will,” said Lou. She was reading the parish maga- zine, which she seldom did, although she was one of the voluntary workers who sent them out, addressing hun- dreds of wrappers every month. She had vaguely noticed, in previous numbers, various references to the Black Madonna, how she had granted this or that favour. Lou had heard that people sometimes came from neighbouring parishes to pray at the Church of the Sacred Heart be- cause of the statue. Some said they came from all over England, but whether this was to admire the art-work or to pray, Lou was not sure. She gave her attention to the article in the parish magazine: While not wishing to make excessive claims... many prayers answered and requests granted to the Faithful in an exceptional way...two remarkable cures effected, but medical evidence is, of course, still in reserve, a certain lapse of time being necessary to ascertain permanency of cure. The first of these cases was a child of twelve suffering from leukaemia... The second... While not desir- ing to create a cultus where none is due, we must remember it is always our duty to honour Our Blessed Lady, the dispenser of all graces, to whom we owe... Another aspect of the information received by the Father Rector concerning our “Black Madonna” is one pertaining to childless couples of which three cases have come to his notice. In each case the couple claim to have offered constant devotion to the “Black Madonna”, and in two of the cases specific requests were made for the favour of a child. In all cases the prayers were answered. The proud parents... It should be the loving duty of every parishioner to make a special thanksgiving... • The Father Rector will be grateful for any further information... 135
“Look, Raymond,” said Lou. “Read this.” They decided to put in for a baby, to the Black Ma- donna. The following Saturday, when they drove to the church for Benediction, Lou jangled her rosary. Raymond pulled up outside the church. “Look here, Lou,” he said, “do you want a baby in any case?” — for he partly thought she was only putting the Black Madonna to the test — “Do you want a child, after all these years?” This was a new thought to Lou. She considered her neat flat and tidy routine, the entertaining with her good coffee cups, the weekly papers and the library books, the tastes which they would not have been able to cultivate had they had a family of children. She thought of her nice young looks which everyone envied, and her freedom of movement. “Perhaps we should try,” she said. “God won’t give us a child if we aren’t meant to have one.” “We have to make some decisions for ourselves,” he said. “And to tell you the truth if you don’t want a child, I don’t.” “There’s no harm in praying for one,” she said. “You have to be careful what you pray for,” he said. “You mustn’t tempt Providence.” She thought of her relatives, and Raymond’s, all married with children. She thought of her sister Eliza- beth with her eight, and remembered that one who cheeked up to the teachers, so pretty and sulky and shabby, and she remembered the fat baby Francis sucking his dummy and clutching Elizabeth’s bony neck. “I don’t see why I shouldn’t have a baby,” said Lou. Oxford St John departed at the end of the month. He promised to write, but they were not surprised when weeks passed and they had no word. “I don’t suppose we shall ever hear from him again,” said Lou. Raymond thought he detected satisfaction in her voice, and would have thought she was getting snobbish as women do as they get older, losing sight of their ideals, had she not gone on to speak of Henry Pierce. Henry had written to say he was nearly cured, but had been advised to return to the West Indies. 136
... “We must go and see him,” said Lou. “We promised. What about the Sunday after next?” “О. K.,” said Raymond. It was the Saturday before that Sunday when Lou had her first sick turn. She struggled out of bed to attend Benediction, but had to leave suddenly during the serv- ice and was sick behind the church in the presbytery yard. Raymond took her home, though she protested against cutting out her rosary to the Black Madonna. “After only six weeks!” she said, and she could hardly tell whether her sickness was due to excitement or nature. "Only six weeks ago,” she said — and her voice had a touch of its old Liverpool — “did we go to that Black Madonna and the prayer’s answered, see.” Raymond looked at her in awe as he held the bowl for her sickness. “Are you sure?” he said. She was well enough next day to go to visit Henry in the sanatorium. He was fatter and, she thought, a little coarser; and tough in his manner, as if once having been nearly disembodied he was not going to let it hap- pen again. He was leaving the country very soon. He promised to come and see them before he left. Lou barely skimmed through his next letter before handing it over to Raymond. Their visitors, now, were ordinary white ones. “Not so colourful,” Raymond said, “as Henry and Oxford were.” Then he looked embarrassed lest he should seem to be making a joke about the word coloured. “Do you miss the niggers?” said Tina Farrell, and Lou forgot to correct her. Lou gave up most of her church work in order to sew and knit for the baby. Raymond gave up the Reader’s Digest. He applied for promotion and got it; he became a departmental manager. The flat was now a waiting- room for next summer, after the baby was born, when they would put down the money for a house. They hoped for one of the new houses on a building site on the out- skirts of the town. “We shall need a garden,” Lou explained to her friends. “I’ll join the Mothers' Union,” she thought. Meantime the spare bedroom was turned into a nursery. Raymond made a cot, regardless that some of the neighbours com- plained of the hammering. Lou prepared a cradle, 137
trimmed it with frills. She wrote to her relatives; she wrote jl to Elizabeth, sent her five pounds, and gave notice that j there would be no further weekly payments, seeing that 1 they would now need every penny. j “She doesn’t require it, anyway,” said Raymond.™ “The Welfare State looks after people like Elizabeth.”'1 And he told Lou about the contraceptives he thought.;! he had seen on the table by the double bed. Lou became ч very excited about this. “How did you know they were J contraceptives? What did they look like? Why didn’t ', you tell me before? What a cheek, calling herself a Cathd- lie, do you think she has a man, then?” Raymond was sorry he had mentioned the subject. .1 “Don’t worry, dear, don’t upset yourself, dear.” '’"Д “And she told me she goes to Mass every Sunday, and '1 all the kids go excepting James. No wonder he’s got into d trouble with an example like that. I might have known, .1 with her peroxide hair. A pound a week I’ve been sending | up to now, that’s fifty-two pounds a year. I would never 3 have done it, calling herself a Catholic with birth control ] by her bedside.” “Don’t upset yourself, dear.” Lou prayed to the Black Madonna three times a week for a safe delivery and a healthy child. She gave her . Я story to the Father Rector who announced it in the next Я parish magazine. “Another case has come to light of the a kindly favour of our ‘Black Madonna’ towards a child- Д less couple...” Lou recited her rosary before the statue I until it was difficult for her to kneel, and, when she stood, 1 could not see her feet. The Mother of God with her black '] bog-oaken drapery, her high black cheekbones and square hands looked more virginal than ever to Lou as she stood 1 counting her beads in front of her stomach. She said to Raymond, “If it’s a girl we must have Mary Я as one of the names. But not the first name, it’s too or- ’/a di nary.” “Please yourself, dear,” said Raymond. The doctor Я had told him it might be a difficult birth. “Thomas, if it’s a boy,” she said, “after my uncle. л Я But if it’s a girl I’d like something fancy for a first £1 name.” He thought, Lou’s slipping, she didn’t used to say i that word, fancy. 138
“What about Dawn?” she said. “I like the sound of Dawn. Then Mary for a second name. Dawn Mary Parker, it sounds sweet.” “Dawn..That’s not a Christian name,” he said. Then he told her, “Just as you please, dear.” “Or Thomas Parker,” she said. She had decided to go into the maternity wing of the hospital like everyone else. But near the time she let Raymond change her mind, since he kept saying: '“At your age, dear, it might be more difficult than for the younger women. Better book a private ward, we’ll manage the expense.” In fact, it was a very easy birth, a girl. Raymond was allowed in to see Lou in. the late afternoon. She was half asleep. “The nurse will take you to see the baby in the nursery ward,” she told him. “She’s lovely, but terribly red.” “They’re always red at birth,” said Raymond. He met the nurse in the corridor. “Any chance of seeing the baby? My wife said...” She looked flustered. “I’ll get the Sister,” she said. “Oh, I don’t want to give any trouble, only my wife said—” “That’s all right. Wait here, Mr Parker.” The Sister appeared, a tall grave woman. Raymond thought her to be short-sighted for she seemed to look at him fairly closely before she hade him follow her. .. - 1 The baby was round and very red, with dark curly hair. “Fancy her having hair. I thought they were born bald/’ said Raymond. “They sometimes have hair at birth,” said the Sister. “She’s very red in colour.” Raymond began comparing his child with those in the other cots. “Far more so than the others.” “Oh, that will wear off.” Next day he found Lou in a half-stupor. She had been given a strong sedative following an attack of screaming hysteria. He sat by her bed, bewildered. Presently a nurse beckoned him from the door. “Will you have a word with Matron?” “Your wife is upset about her baby,” said the matron. “You see, the colour. She’s a beautiful baby, perfect. It’s a question of the colour.” 139
“I noticed the baby was red,” said Raymond, “but the nurse said — ” “Oh, the red will go. It changes, you know. But the baby will certainly be brown, if not indeed black, as indeed we think she will be. A beautiful healthy child.” “Black?” said Raymond. “Yes, indeed we think so, indeed I must say, certainly so,” said the matron. “We did not expect your wife to take it so badly when we told her. We’ve had plenty of dark babies here, but most of the mothers expect it.” “There must be a mix-up. You must have mixed up the babies,” said Raymond. “There’s no question of mix-up,” said the matron sharply. “We’ll soon settle that. We’ve had some of that before. ” “But neither of us are dark,” said Raymond. “You’ve seen my wife. You see me —” “That’s something you must work out for yourselves. I’d have a word with the doctor if I were you. But what- ever conclusion you come to, please don’t upset your wife at this stage. She has already refused to feed the child, says it isn’t hers, which is ridiculous.” “Was it Oxford St John?” said Raymond. “Raymond, the doctor told you not to come here upsetting me. I’m feeling terrible.” “Was it Oxford St John?” “Clear out of here, you swine, saying things like that.” He demanded to be taken to see the baby, as he had done every day for a week. The nurses were gathered round it, neglecting the squalling whites in the other cots for the sight of their darling black. She was indeed quite black, with a woolly crop and tiny negroid nostrils. She had been baptized that morning, though not in her par- ents’ presence. One of the nurses had stood as godmother. The nurses dispersed in a flurry as Raymond ap- proached. He looked hard at the baby. It looked back with its black button eyes. He saw the name-tab round its neck. “Dawn Mary Parker.” He got hold of a nurse in the corridor. Look here, you just take that name Parker off that child’s neck. The name’s not Parker, it isn’t my child.” The nurse said, “Get away, we’re busy.” 140
“There’s just a chance," said the doctor to Raymond, "that if there’s ever been black blood in your family or your wife’s, it’s coming out now. It’s a very long chance. I’ve never known it happen in my experience, but I’ve heard of cases, I could read them up.” “There’s nothing like that in my family,” said Ray- mond. He thought of Lou, the obscure Liverpool ante- cedents. The parents had died before he had met Lou. “It could be several generations back,” said the doc- tor. Raymond went home, avoiding the neighbours who would stop him to inquire after Lou. He rather regretted smashing up the cot in his first fury. That was something low coming out in him. But again, when he thought of the tiny black hands of the baby with their pink finger- nails he did not regret smashing the cot. He was successful in tracing the whereabouts of Oxford St John. Even before he heard the result of Oxford’s blood test he said to Lou, “Write and ask your relations if there’s been any black blood in the family.” “Write and ask yours," she said. She refused to look at the black baby. The nurses fussed round it all day, and came to report its progress to Lou. “Pull yourself together, Mrs Parker, she’s a lovely child.” “You must care for your infant,” said the priest. “You don’t know what I’m suffering,” Lou said. “In the name of God,” said the priest, “if you’re a Catholic Christian you’ve got to expect to suffer.” • “I can’t go against my nature,” said Lou. “I can’t be expected to —” Raymond said to her one day in the following week, “The blood tests are all right, the doctor says.” “What do you mean, all right?” “Oxford’s blood and the baby’s don’t tally, and —” “Oh, shut up,” she said. “The baby’s black and your blood tests can’t make it white.” “No,” he said. He had fallen out with his mother, through his inquiries whether there had been coloured blood in his family. “The doctor says/’ he said, “that 141
-р-л; -л t. - _ ; - * Л® these black mixtures sometimes occur in seaport towns. JI It might have been generations back.” “One thing,” said Lou. “I’m not going to take that child back to the flat.” “You’ll have to,” he said. Elizabeth wrote her a letter which Raymond inter?,! cepted: “Dear Lou Raymond is asking if we have any blacks I in the family well thats funny you have a coloured God ' is not asleep. There was that Flinn cousin Tommy nt Liverpool he was very dark they put it down to the past : a nigro off a ship that would be before our late Mothers® Time God rest her soul she would turn in her grave you Д shoud have kept up your bit to me whats a pound a Week to you. It was on our fathers side the colour and Mary a Flinn you remember at the dairy was dark remember fl her hare was like nigro hare it must be back in the olden days the nigro some ansester but it is only nature. ! thank the almighty it has missed my kids and your hubby <1 must think it was that nigro you was showing off when J you came to my place. I wish you all the best as a widow Я with kids you shoud send my money as per usual your1'! affec sister Elizabeth.” “I gather from Elizabeth,” said Raymond to Lou, 1 “that there was some element of colour in your family.® Of course, you couldn't be expected to know about it. j I do think, though, that some kind of record should be Д kept.” “Oh, shut up,’’said Lou. “The baby’s black and nothing: 3 can make it white.” Two days before Lou left the hospital she had a visitor,.,! although she had given instructions that no one except j Raymond should be let in to see her. This lapse she attri-" I buted to the nasty curiosity of the nurses, for it was Henry' 4 Pierce come to say good-bye before embarkation. He j stayed less than five minutes. “Why, Mrs Parker, your visitor didn’t stay long,” * said the nurse. “No, I soon got rid of him. I thought 1 made it clear to you that I didn’t want to see anyone. You shouldn’t J have let him in.” -id . "Oh, sorry, Mrs Parker, but the young gentleman looked so upset when we told him so- He said he was going abroad « 142
find it was his last chance, he might' never see you lignin. He said, ‘How’s the baby?’, and we said,‘Tip- lop1.” “I know what’s in your mind,” said Lou. “But it isn’t true. I’ve got the blood tests.” “Oh, Mrs Parker, I wouldn't suggest for a min- ute...” "She must have went with one of they niggers that used to come.” Lou could never be sure if that was what she heard from the doorways and landings as she climbed the stairs of Cripps House, the neighbours hushing their conversa- tion as she approached. “I can’t take to the child. Try as I do, I simply can’t oven like it.” “Nor me,” said Raymond. “Mind you, if it was anyone rise’s child I would think it was all right. It’s just tho thought of it being mine, and people thinking it isn t. "That’s just it,” she said. One of Raymond’s colleagues had asked him that day how his friends Oxford and Henry were getting on. Raymond- had to look twice before he decided that the question was innocent. But one never, knew... Already Lou and Raymond had approached the adop- tion society. It was now only a matter of waiting for word. “If that child was mine,” said Tina Farrell, “I’d never part with her. I wish we could afford to adopt another. She’s the loveliest little darkie in the world.” “You wouldn’t think so,” said Lou, “if she really was yours. Imagine it for yourself, waking up to find you’ve had a black baby that everyone thinks has a nigger for its father.” “It would be a shock,” Tina said, and tittered. “We’ve got the blood tests,” said Lou quickly. Raymond got a transfer to London. They got word about the adoption very soon. “We've done the right thing,” said Lou. “Even the priest had to agree with that, considering how strongly we felt against keeping the child.” “Oh, he said it was a good thing?” 143
“No, not a good thing. In fact he said it would ha vol been a good thing if we could have kept the baby. But J failing that, we did the right thing. Apparently, there’s^ a difference.’’ FOR DISCUSSION 1. Do you like the author’s method of characterization? i Explain your answer. 2. Discuss the importance of character portrayal in this story I as it affects the plot. J 3. Discuss what devices the author used to reveal, gradually, j the character of Lou Parker. 4. At what point does the reader begin to realize that Lou Vfl Parker is not so high-minded and sincere on the question of race j and colour as she seemed to be? ' 1 5. What advantages does the author gain by paying so much 4 attention to the Parkers’ friendship with the Jamaicans? 6. How does the account of the Parkers’ visit to Elizabeth ;] fit into the larger structure of the narrative? 7. Consider, how much of the effect is produced by the fact a that the Parkers were religious? 8. Does tho end of the story come as a complete surprise to you? If not, at what point in the story did you know how it would end? 9. How does the author prepare the reader for the outcome? What clues to the outcome might you see in tho story? 10. What social views are represented in the story? 11. What are some of the comments that the author makes J about human nature? 12. To make the story more effective M. Spark uses irony. Point out some of the ironical elements of the story and explain !| how they affect character portrayal and social views represented in the story.
Flannery O'Connor EVERYTHING THAT RISES MUST CONVERGE Her doctor had told Julian’s mother that she must lose twenty pounds on account of her blood pressure, so on Wednesday night Julian had to take her downtown on the bus for a reducing class at the Y. The reducing class was designed for working girls over fifty, who weighed from 165 to 200 pounds. His mother was one of the slim- mer ones, but she said ladies did not tell their age or weight. She would not ride the buses by herself at night since they had been integrated,* and because the reducing class was one of her few pleasures, necessary for her health, and free, she said Julian could at least put himself out to take her, considering all she did for him. Julian did not like to consider all she did for him, but 6 И. В. Ступников 145
every Wednesday night he braced himself * and took her. She was almost ready to go, standing before the hall- mirror, putting on her hat, while he, his hands behind him, appeared pinned to the door frame, waiting like.; Saint Sebastian * for the arrows to begin’piercing him. The hat was new and had cost her seven dollars and a half. She kept saying, “Maybe I shouldn’t have paid that for it. No, I shouldn’t-have. I’ll take it off and return it tomorrow. I shouldn’t have bought it.” Julian raised his eyes to heaven. “Yes, you should have bought it,” he said. “Put it on and let’s go.” It was. a hideous hat. A purple velvet flap came down on one side of it and stood up on he other; the rest of it was green and looked like a cushion with the stuffing out. He de- cided it was less comical than jaunty and pathetic. Every- thing that gave her pleasure was small and depressed him. She lifted the hat one more time and set it down slowly on top of her head. Two wings of gray hair protruded on either side of her florid face, but her eyes, sky-blue, were as innocent and untouched by experience as they must have been when she was ten. Were it not that she was a widow who had struggled fiercely to feed and clothe and put him through school and who was supporting him still, “until he got on his feet,” she might have been a little girl that he had to take to town. “It’s all right, it’s all right,” he said. “Let’s go.” He opened the door himself and started down the walk to get her going. The sky was a dying violet and the houses stood out darkly against it, bulbous liver-colored monstros- ities of a uniform ugliness though no two were alike. Since this had been a fashionable neighborhood forty years ago, his mother persisted in thinking they did well to have an apartment in it. Each house had a narrow col- lar of dirt around it in which sat, usually, a grubby child. Julian walked with his hands in his pockets, his head down and thrust forward and his eyes glazed with the determination to make himself completely numb during the time he would be sacrificed to her pleasure. The door closed and he turned to find the dumpy fig- ure, surmounted zby the atrocious Jiat, coming toward him. “Well,” she said, “you only live once and paying
a little more:for,it, I.at least won’t meet myself coming - and going.” * • “Some day I’ll start making money,” Julian said gloom- ily — he knew he never would — “and you can have one of those jokes whenever you take the fit.” But first they would move. He visualized a place where the nearest neighbors would be three miles away on either side.. “I think you’re doing fine,” she said, drawing on her gloves. “You’ve only been out of school a year. Rome wasn’t built in a day.” She was one of the few members of the Y reducing class who arrived in hat and gloves and who had a son who has been to college. “It takes time,” she said, “and the world is in such a mess. This hat looked better on me than any of the others, though when she brought it out I said, ‘Take that thing back. I wouldn’t have it on my head,’ and she said, ‘Now wait till you see it on,’ and when she put it on me, I said, ‘We-ull,’ and she said, ‘If you ask me, that hat does something for you and you do something for the hat, and besides,’ she said, ‘with that hat, you won’t meet yourself coming and going.’” Julian thought he could have stood * his lot better if she had been selfish, if she had been an old hag who drank and screamed at him. He walked along, saturated in depression, as if in the midst of his martyrdom he had lost his faith. Catching sight of his long, hopeless, irri- tated face, she stopped suddenly with a grief-stricken look, and pulled back on his arm. “Wait on me,” she said. “I’m going back to the house and take this thing off and tomorrow I’m going to return it. I was out of my head. I can pay the gas bill with that seven-fifty.” He caught her arm in a vicious grip. “You are not going to take it back,” he said. “I like it.” “Well,” she said. “I don’t think I ought...” “Shut up and enjoy it,” he muttered, more depressed than ever. “With the world in the mess it’s in," she said, “it’s a wonder we can enjoy anything. I tell you, the bottom rail is on the top.” Julian sighed. “Of course,” she said, “if you know who are you, you can go anywhere.” She said this every time he took her to the reducing class. “Most of them in it are not our kind 6* 147
of people,” she said, “but I can be gracious to anybody; I know who I am.” “They don’t give a damn for your graciousness,’’ Julian said savagely. “Knowing who you are is good for one generation only. You haven’t the foggiest idea where you stand now or who you are.” She stopped and allowed her eyes to flash at him. “I most certainly do know who I am,” she said, “and if you don’t know who you are, I’m ashamed of you.” “Oh hell,” Julian said. “Your great-grandfather was a former governor of this state,” she said. “Your grandfather was a prosperous land owner. Your grandmother was a Godhigh.” “Will you look around you,” he said tensely, “and see where you are now?” and he swept his arm jerkily out to indicate the neighborhood, which the growing dark- ness at least made less dingy. “You remain what you are,” she said. “Your great- grandfather had a plantation and two hundred slaves.” “There are no more slaves,” he said irritably. “They were better off when they were,” she said. He groaned to see that she was off on that topic. She rolled onto it every few days like a train on an open track. He knew every step, every junction, every swamp along the way, and knew the exact point at which her conclusion would roll majestically into the station: “It’s ridiculous. It’s simply not realistic. They should rise, yes, but on their own side of the fence.” “Let’s skip it,” Julian said. “The ones I feel sorry for,” she said, “are the ones that are half white. They’re tragic.” “Will you skip it?” “Suppose we were half white. We would certainly have mixed feelings.” “I have mixed feelings now,” he groaned. “Well let’s talk about something pleasant,” she said. “I remember going to Grandpa’s when I was a little girl. Then the house had double stairways that went up to what was really the second floor — all the cooking was done on the first. I used to like to stay down in the kitchen on account of the way the walls smelled. I would sit with my nose pressed against the plaster and take deep breaths. Actually the place belonged to the Godhighs but your 148
grandfather Chestny paid the mortgage and saved it for them. They were in reduced circumstances,” she said, "but reduced or not, they never forgot who they were. ” “Doubtless that decayed mansion reminded them,” Julian muttered. He never spoke of it without contempt or thought of it without longing. He had seen it once when he was a child before it had been sold. The double stairways had rotted and been torn down. Negroes were living in it. But it remained in his mind as his mother had known it. It appeared in his dreams regularly. He would stand on the wide porch, listening to the rustle of oak leaves, then wander through the high-ceilinged hall into the parlor that opened onto it and gaze at the worn rugs and faded draperies. It occurred to him that it was he, not she, who could have appreciated it. He preferred its threadbare elegance to anything he could name and it was because of that all the neighborhoods they had lived in had been a torment to him — whereas she had hardly known the difference. She called her insensitivity “being adjustable.” “And I remember the old darky who was my nurse, Caroline. There was no better person in the world. I’ve always had a great respect for my colored friends,” she said. “I’d do anything in the world for them and they’d . ..” “Will you for God’s sake get off that subject?” Julian said. When he got on a bus by himself, he made it a point to sit down beside a Negro, in reparation as it were for his mother’s sins. “You’ve mighty touchy tonight,” she said. “Do you feel all right?” “Yes I feel all right,” he said. "Now lay off.” She pursed her lips. “Well, you certainly are in a vile humor,” she observed. “I just won’t speak to you at all.” They had reached the bus stop. There was no bus in sight and Julian, his hands still jammed in his pockets and his head thrust forward, scowled down the empty street. The frustration of having to wait on the bus as well as ride on it began to creep up his neck like a hot hand. The presence of his mother was borne in upon him as she gave a pained sigh. He looked at her bleakly. She was holding herself very erect under the preposterous hat, wearing it like a banner of her imaginary dignity. 149-
There was in him an evil urge to break her spirit. He sud- 'JM denly unloosened his tie and pulled it off and put it in (4 his pocket. She stiffened. “Why must you look like that when you take me to town?” she said. “Why must you deliberately ’ $,) embarrass me?” “If you’ll never learn where you are,” he said, “you ’ can at least learn where I am.” “You look like a — thug,” she said. “Then I must be one,” he murmured. “I’ll just go home,” she said. “I will not bother you. If you can’t do a little thing like that for me...” Rolling his eyes upward, he put his tie back on. “Re- stored to my class,” he muttered. He thrust his face toward her and hissed, “True culture is in the mind, the mind,” he said, and tapped his head, “the mind.” I A he said, and tapped his head, “the mind. “It’s in the heart,” she said, “and in how you do things and how you do things is because of who you are.” ‘,'i “Nobody in the damn bus cares who you are.” "I care who I am,” she said icily. The lighted bus appeared on top of the next hill and as it approached, they moved out into the street to meet ,* it. He put his hand under her elbow and hoisted her up * on the creaking step. She entered with a little smile, as ? if she were going into a drawing room where everyone had been waiting for her. While he put. in the tokens, she J- sat down on one of the broad front seats for three which faced the aisle. A thin woman with protruding teeth ' and long yellow hair was sitting on the end of it. His a mother moved up beside her and left room for J ulian be- ''! side herself. He sat down and looked at the floor across <3 the aisle where a pair of thin feet in red and white canvas I sandals were planted. His mother immediately began a general conversation j meant to attract anyone who felt like talking. “Can it :fl get any hotter?” she said and removed from her purse a folding fan, black with a Japanese scene on it, which she ч began to flutter before her. “I reckon it might could,” the woman with the pro- я trading teeth said, “but I know for a fact my apartment -j couldn’t get no hotter.” “It must get the afternoon sun,” his mother said. She sat forward and looked up and down the bus. It was half > 150
= ут;-" л - ’ ’ ' J ” У” ’ ’ < • - - . .fj filled. Everybody was white. “I see we have the bus to ourselves,” she said. Julian cringed! “For a change,” said the woman across the aisle, the owner of the red and white canvas sandals. “I come on one the other day and they were thick as fleas — up front and all through.” “The world is in a mess everywhere,” his mother said, “I don’t know how we’ve let it get in this fix.” “What gets my goat is all those boys from good fami- lies stealing automobile tires,” the woman with the pro- truding teeth said. “I told my boy, I said you may not be rich but you been raised right and if I ever catch you in any such mess, they can sent you on to the reformatory. Be exactly where you belong.” “Training tells,” his mother said. “Is your boy in '. high school?” “Ninth grade,” the woman said. “My son just finished college last year. He wants to write but he’s selling typewriters until he gets started,” his mother said. The woman leaned forward and peered at Julian. He threw her such a malevolent look that she subsided against the seat. On the floor across the aisle there was an aban- doned newspaper. He got up and got it and opened it out in front of him. His mother discreetly continued the con- , versation in a lower tone but the woman across the aisle said in a loud voice, “Well that’s nice. Selling typewriters is close to writing. He can go right from one to the other. ” “I tell him,” his mother said, “that Rome wasn’t built in a day.” Behind the newspaper Julian was withdrawing into the inner compartment of his mind where he spent most of his time. This was a kind of mental bubble in which he established himself when he could not bear to be a part of what was going on around him. From it he could see out and judge but in it he was safe from any kind of pene- tration from without. It was the only place where he felt free of the general idiocy of his fellows. His mother had never entered it but from it he could see her with absolute clarity. The old lady was clever enough and he thought that if she had started from any of the right premises, more 151
might have been expected of her. She lived according to the laws of her own fantasy world, outside of which he had never seen her set foot. The law of it was to sacrifice herself for him after she had first created the necessity to do so by making a mess of things. If he had permitted her sacrifices, it was only because her lack of foresight had made them necessary. All of her life had been a strug- > gle to act like a Chestny without the Chestny goods, and to give him everything she thought a Chestny ought to have; but since, said she, it was fun to struggle, why complain? And when you had won, as she had won, what fun to look back on the hard times! He could not forgive ; her that she had enjoyed the struggle and that she thought ' she had won. What she meant when she said she had won was that - she had brought him up successfully and had sent him to college and that he had turned out so well — good looking „ (her teeth had gone unfilled so that his could be straight- ened), intelligent (he realized he was too intelligent to > be a success), and with a future ahead of him (there was of course no future ahead of him). She excused his gloomi- ness on the grounds that he was still growing up and his radical ideas on his lack of practical experience. She said he didn’t yet know a thing about “life,” that he hadn’t even entered the real world — when already he was as disenchanted with it as a man of fifty. The further irony of all this was that in spite of her, ” he had turned out so well. In spite of going to only a third-rate college, he had, on his own initiative, come out with a first-rate education; in spite of growing up dominated by a small mind, he had ended up with a large one; in spite of all her foolish views, he was free of prejudice and unafraid to face facts. Most miraculous of all, instead of being blinded by love for her as she was for him, he had cut himself emotionally free of her and , could see her with complete objectivity. He was not dominated by his mother. The bus stopped with a sudden jerk and shook him from his meditation. A woman from the back lurched forward with little steps and barely escaped falling in his newspaper as she righted herself. She got off and a large Negro got on. Julian kept his paper lowered to watch. It gave him a certain satisfaction to see injustice 152 S’- (i • J.
in daily operation. It confirmed his view that with a few exceptions there was no one worth knowing within a radius of three hundred miles. The Negro was well dressed and carried a briefcase. He looked around and then sat down on the other end of the seat where the woman with the red and white canvas sandals was sitting. He imme- diately unfolded a newspaper and obscured himself be- hind it. Julian’s mother’s elbow at once prodded insistently into his ribs. “Now you see why I won’t ride on these buses by myself,” she whispered. The woman with the red and white canvas sandals had risen at the same time the Negro sat down and had gone further back in the bus and taken the seat of the woman who had got off. His mother leaned forward and cast her an approving look. Julian rose, crossed the aisle, and sat down in the place of the woman with the canvas sandals. From this position, he looked serenely across at his mother. Her face had turned an angry red. He stared at her, making his eyes the eyes of a stranger. He felt his tension suddenly lift as if he had openly declared war on her. He would have liked to get in conversation with the Negro and to talk with him about art or politics or any subject that would be above the comprehension of those around them, but the man remained entrenched behind his paper. He was either ignoring the change of seating or had never noticed it. There was no way for Julian to convey his sympathy. His mother kept her eyes fixed reproachfully on his face. The woman with the protruding teeth was looking at him avidly as if he were a type of monster new to her. “Do you have a light?” he asked the Negro. Without looking away from his paper, the man reached in his pocket and handed him a packet of matches. “Thanks,” Julian said. For a moment he held the matches foolishly. A no smoking sign looked down upon him from over the door. This alone would not have deterred him; he had no cigarettes. He had quit smoking some months before because he could not afford it. “Sorry,” he muttered and handed back the matches. The Negro lowered the paper and gave him an annoyed look. He took the matches and raised the paper again. 153
' .... ' Jj His mother continued to gaze at him but she did not take advantage of his momentary discomfort. Her eyest| retained their battered look. Her face seemed to be unnat- a urally red, as if her blood pressure had risen. J ulian allowed | no glimmer of sympathy to show on his face. Having got the advantage, he wanted desperately to keep it and carry J i t through. He would have liked to teach her a lesson that I would last her a while, but there seemed no way to con- ,J tinue the point. The Negro refused to come out from bo- -j hind his paper. Julian folded his arms and looked stolidly before him, facing her but as if he did not see her, as if he had ceased ,~i to recognize her existence. He visualized a scene in which, the bus having reached their stop, he would remain in his seat and when she said, “Aren’t you going to get off?” • he would look at her as at a stranger who had rashly ’g addressed him. The corner they got off on was usually a deserted, but it was well lighted and it would not hurt her to walk by herself the four blocks to the Y. He decided ' to wait until the time came and then decide whether or not he would let her get off by herself. He would have to be at the Y at ten to bring her back, but he could leave ., her wondering if he was going to show up. There was no reason for her to think she could always depend on him. S He retired again into the high-ceilinged room sparsely t settled with large pieces of antique furniture. His soul expanded momentarily but then he became aware of his mother across from him and the vision shriveled. He studied her coldly. Her feet in little pumps dangled like a child’s and did not quite reach the floor. She was train- 1 ing on him an exaggerated look of reproach. He felt ; completely detached from her. At that moment he could 3 with pleasure have slapped her as he would have slapped a particularly obnoxious child in his charge. He began to imagine various unlikely ways by which | he could teach her a lesson. He might make friends with J some distinguished Negro professor or lawyer and bring him home to spend the evening. He would be entirely justified but her blood pressure would rise to 300. He could not push her to the extent of making her have a 3 stroke, and moreover, he had never been successful at making any Negro friends. He had tried to strike up an J acquaintance on the bus with some of the better types, 154 S 1
- -1 with ones that looked like professors or ministers or law- yers. One morning he had sat down next to a distinguished- looking dark brown man who had answered his questions with a sonorous solemnity but who had turned out to be an undertaker. Another day he had sat down beside a cigar-smoking Negro with a diamond ring on his finger, but after a few stilted pleasantries, the Negro had rung the buzzer and risen, slipping two lottery tickets into Julian’s hand as he climbed over him to leave. He imagined his mother lying desperately ill and his being able to secure only a Negro doctor for her. He toyed with that idea for a few minutes and then dropped it for a momentary vision of himself participating as a sympa- thizer in a sit-in demonstration. This was possible but he did not linger with it. Instead, he approached the ultimate horror. He brought home a beautiful suspi- ciously Negroid woman. Prepare yourself, he said. There is nothing you can do about it. This is the woman I’ve chosen. She’s intelligent, dignified, even good, and she’s suffered and she hasn’t thought it fun. Now persecute us, go ahead and persecute us. Drive her out of here, but remember, you’re driving me too. His eyes were narrowed and through the indignation he had generated, he saw his mother across the aisle, purple-faced, shrunken to the dwarf-like proportions of her moral nature, sitting like a mummy beneath the ridiculous banner of her hat. - He was tilted out of his fantasy again as the bus stopped. The door opened with a sucking hiss and out of the dark a large, gaily dressed, sullen-looking colored woman got on with a little boy. The child, who might have been four, had on a short plaid suit and a Tyrolean hat with a blue feather in it. J ulian hoped that he would sit down beside him and that the woman would push in beside his mother. He could think of no better arrangement. As she waited for her tokens, the woman was surveying the seating possibilities — he hoped with the idea of sitting where she was least wanted. There was something familiar-looking about her but Julian could not place what it was. She was a giant of a woman. Her face was set not only to meet opposition but to seek it out. The downward tilt of her large lower lip was like a warning sign: don't tamper with me. Her bulging figure was en- 155
cased in a green crepe dress and her feet overflowed in red shoes. She had on a hideous hat. A purple velvet flap came down on one side of it and stood up on the other; the rest of it was green and looked like a cushion with the stuffing out. She carried a mammoth red pocket- book that bulged throughout as if it were stuffed with rocks. To Julian’s dissappointment, the little boy climbed up on the empty seat beside his mother. His mother lumped all children, black and white, into the common category, “cute,” and she thought little Negroes were on the whole cuter than little white children. She smiled at the little boy as he climbed on the seat. Meanwhile the woman was bearing down upon the empty seat beside Julian. To his annoyance, she squeezed herself into it. He saw his mother’s face change as the woman settled herself next to him and he realized with satisfaction that this was more objectionable to her than it was to him. Her face seemed almost gray and there was a look of dull recognition in her eyes, as if suddenly she had sickened at some awful confrontation. Julian saw that it was because she and the woman had, in a sense, swapped sons. Though his mother would not realize the symbolic significance of this, she would feel it. His amuse- ment showed plainly on his face. The woman next to him muttered something unintelli- gible to herself. He was conscious of a kind of bristling next to him, a muted growling like that of an angry cat. He could not see anything but the red pocketbook upright on the bulging green thighs. He visualized the woman as she had stood waiting for her tokens — the ponderous figure, rising from the red shoes upward over the solid hips, the mammoth bosom, the haughty face, to the green and purple hat. His eyes widened. The vision of the two hats, identical, broke upon him with the radiance of a brilliant surpise. His face was sud- denly lit with joy. He could not believe that Fate had thrust upon his mother such a lesson. He gave a loud chuckle so that she would look at him and see that he saw. She turned her eyes on him slowly. The blue in them seemed to have turned a bruised purple. For a moment he had an uncomfortable sense of her innocence, but it 156
lasted only a second before principle rescued him. Justice entitled him to laugh. His grin hardened until it said to her as plainly as if he were saying aloud: Your punish- ment exactly fits your pettiness. This should teach you a permanent lesson. Her eyes shifted to the woman. She seemed unable to bear looking at him and to find the woman preferable. He became conscious again of the bristling presence at his side. The woman was rumbling like a volcano about to become active. His mother’s mouth began to twitch slightly at one corner. With a sinking heart, he saw incipient signs of recovery on her face and realized that this was going to strike her suddenly as funny and was going to be no lesson at all. She kept her eyes on the woman and an amused smile came over her face as if the woman were a monkey that had stolen her hat. The little Negro was looking up at her with large fascinated eyes. He had been trying to attract her attention for some time. “Carver!” the woman said suddenly. “Come heah!” When he saw that the spotlight was on him at last, Carver drew his feet up and turned himself toward Julian’s mother and giggled. “Carver!” the woman said. “You heah me? Come heah!” Carver slid down from the seat but remained squatting with his back against the base of it, his head turned slyly around toward Julian’s mother, who was smiling at him. The woman reached a hand across the aisle and snatched him to her. He righted himself and hung backwards on her knee, grinning at Julian’s mother. “Isn’t he cute?" Julian’s mother said to the woman with the protruding teeth. “I reckon he is,” the woman said without convic- tion. The Negress yanked him upright but he eased out of her grip and shot across the aisle and scrambled, giggling wildly, onto the seat beside his love. “I think he likes me,” Julian’s mother said, and smiled at the woman. It was the smile she used when she was being particularly gracious to an inferior. Julian saw everything lost. The lesson had rolled off her like rain on a roof. 157
The woman stood up and yanked the little hoy off the seat as if she were snatching him from contagion. Julian could feel the rage in her at having no weapon like his mother’s smile. She gave the child a sharp slap across his leg. He howled once and then thrust his head into her stomach and kicked his feet against her shins. “Be-have,” she said vehemently. The bus stopped and the Negro who had been reading the newspaper got off. The woman moved over and set the little boy down with a thump between herself and Julian. She held him firmly by the knee. In a moment he put his hands in front of his face and peeped at Julian’s mother through his fingers. “I see yoooooooo!” she said and put her hand in front of her face and peeped at him. The woman slapped his hand down. “Quit yo' * fool- ishness,” she said, “before I knock the living Jesus * out of you!” Julian was thankful that the next stop was theirs. He reached up and pulled the cord. The woman reached up and pulled it at the same time. Oh my God, he thought. He had the terrible intuition that when they got off tho bus together, his mother would open her purse and give the little boy a nickel. The gesture would be as natural to her as breathing. The bus stopped and the woman got up and lunged to the front, dragging the child, who wished to stay on, after her. Julian and his mother got up and followed. As they neared the door, Julian tried to relieve her of her pocketbook. . “No,” she murmured, “I want to give the little boy a nickel.” - “No!” Julian hissed. “No!” She smiled down at the child and opened her bag. The bus door opened and the woman picked him up by the i arm and descended with him, hanging at her hip. Once in the street she set him down and shook him. Julian’s mother had to close her purse-while she got i down the bus step but as soon as her feet were on the J ground, she opened it again and began to rummage inside. | “I can’t find but a penny,” she whispered, “but it looks like a new one.” “Don’t do it!” Julian said fiercely between his teeth. There .was a streetlight on the corner and she hurried to 158
get under it so that she could better see into her pocket- book, The woman was heading off rapidly down the street with the child still hanging backward on her hand. 7 “Oh little boy!” Julian’s mother called and took a few quick steps and caught up with them just beyond the lamp- post. “Here’s a bright new penny for you,” and she held out the coin, which shone bronze in the dim light. The huge woman turned and for a moment stood, her shoulders lifted and her face frozen with frustrated rage, and stared at Julian’s mother. Then all at once she seemed to explode like a piece of machinery that had been given one ounce of pressure too much. Julian saw the black fist swing out with the red pocketbook. He shut his eyes and cringed as he heard the woman shout, "He don’t take nobody’s pennies!” When he opened his eyes, the woman was disappearing down the street with the little boy staring wide-eyed over her shoulder. Julian’s mother was sitting on the sidewalk. “I told you not to do that,” Julian said angrily. “I told you not to do that!” He stood over her for a minute, gritting his teeth. Her legs were stretched out in front of her and her hat was on her lap. He squatted down and looked her in the face. It was totally expressionless. “You got exactly what you deserved,” ho said. “Now get up.” He picked up her pocketbook and put what had fallen out back in it. He picked the hat up off her lap. The penny caught his eye on the sidewalk andJie picked that up and let it drop before her eyes into her purse. Then he stood up and leaned over and held his hands out to pull her up. She remained immobile. He signed. Rising above them on either side were black apartment buildings, marked with irregular rectangles of light. At the end of the block a man came out of a door and walked off in the opposite direction. “All right,”he said, “suppose somebody happens. by and wants to know why you’re sitting on the sidewalk?” She took the hand and, breathing hard, pulled heavily up on it and then stood for a moment, swaying slightly as if the spots of light in the darkness were circling around her. Her eyes, shadowed and confused, finally settled on his face. He did not try to conceal his irritation. “I hope this teaches you a lesson,” he said. She leaned for- 159
ward and her eyes raked his face. She seemed trying to determine his identity. Then, as if she found nothing familiar about him, she started off with a headlong move- ment in the wrong direction. “Aren’t you going on to the Y?” he asked. “Home,” she muttered. “Well, are we walking?” For answer she kept going. Julian followed along, his hands behind him. He saw no reason to let the lesson she had had go without backing it up with an explanation of its meaning. She might as well be made to understand what had happened to her. “Don’t think that was just an uppity Negro woman,” he said. “That was the whole colored race which will no longer take your condescending pennies. That was your black double. She can wear the same hat as you, and to be sure,” he added gratuitously (because he thought it was funny), “it looked better on her than it did on you. What all this means,” he said, “is that the old world is gone. The old manners are obsolete and your graciousness is not worth a damn.” He thought bitterly of the house that had been lost for him. “You aren’t who you think you are,” he said. She continued to plow ahead, paying no attention to him. Her hair had come undone on one side. She dropped her pocketbook and took no notice. He stooped and picked it up and handed it to her but she did not take it. “You needn't act as if the world had come to an end,” he said, “because it hasn’t. From now on you’ve got to live in a new world and face a few realities for a change. Buck up,” he said, “it won’t kill you.” She was breathing fast. “Let’s wait on the bus,” he said. “Home,” she said thickly. "I hate to see you behave like this,” he said. “Just like a child. I should be able to expect more of you.” He de- cided to stop where he was and make her stop and wait for a bus. “I’m not going any farther,” he said, stopping. “We’re going on the bus.” She continued to go on as if she had not heard him. He took a few steps and caught her arm and stopped her. He looked into her face and caught his breath. He was looking into a face he had never seen before. “Tell Grandpa to come get me,” she said. 160
He stared stricken. “Tell Caroline to come get me,” she said. Stunned, he let her go and she lurched forward again, walking as if one leg were shorter than the other. A tide of darkness seemed to be sweeping her from him. “Mother!” he cried. “Darling, sweetheart, wait!” Crumpling, she fell to the pavement. He dashed forward and fell at her side, crying, “Mamma, Mamma!” He turned her over. Her face was fiercely distorted. One eye, large and staring, moved slightly to the left as if it had become unmoored. The other remained fixed on him, raked his face again, found nothing and closed. “Wait here, wait here!” he cried and jumped up and began to run for help toward a cluster of lights he saw i n the distance ahead of him. “Help, help!” he shouted, but his voice was thin, scarcely a thread of sound. The lights drifted farther away the faster he ran and his feet moved numbly as if they carried him nowhere. The tide of dark- ness seemed to sweep him back to her, postponing from moment to moment his entry into the world of guilt and sorrow. FOR DISCUSSION 1. How would you sum up the theme of this story? 2. What kind of details does the author provide about the characters? Which specific facts provoke you to speculation about their personalities? Does the author herself enter into such specula- tions? 3. What conclusions about the boy’s character can you draw from the story? 4. Do the figures of speech and the diction with which Julian expresses his arguments seem to reflect the quality of his' mind? >
5. Did the author want you to he sympathetic with Julian, or did he want you to be against him? What were you told about him that made you feel as you did? G. In this story Julian is contrasted with his mother. What differences are there between them? What is the reason of their discord? 7. How do you explain Julian’s feelings toward his mother during the episode in the bus? 8. What caused the change in Julian’s attitude toward his mother at the end of the story? 9. How does the author deal with the problem of loneliness and alienation of people who love each other? 10. Is there a system to increase the psychological tension? 11. What is the meaning behind the title of the story? 12. “Everything That Rises Must Converge” and “Black Madon- na” both deal with Negro problem. Which story gave you more to think about? Why?
LIST OF AUTHORS Aumonier, Stacy (1887—1928) — English novelist and short- story writer. He was educated at Cranleigh, and began his career as a decorative designer and landscape painter, exhibiting frequently at the Royal Academy, the Royal Institute, and the International. In 1908 Aumonier launched as a society entertainer, giving recitals of his own original character sketches at the Comedy, Criterion, and other theatres. Aumonier began writing in 1913. The first of his literary works to attract notice was The Friends, a short story concerning two furniture salesmen who drank themselves to death. The Querrils (1919), his best known novel, is a sympathetic and observant study of a wartime family. Aumonier’s short stories reflected the charm and humour of a many-sided person, who had been a painter, entertainer and journalist. His principal works are Three Bars' Interval (1917), The Quer- rils (1919), One After Another (1920), Heartbeat (1922), Miss Brace- girdle and Others (1923), Odd Fish: Being a Casual Selection of London Residents (with George Belcher) (1923), Overheard: Fifteen Tales (1924), Little Windows (1931). Bates, Herbert Ernest (1905—1974) — English novelist and sto- ry writer. He was educated at the Grammar School, in Kettering, then worked for a while on a local newspaper in the Midlands, thinking this the quickest way to become an author. Disliking the drudgery of journalism, he became a clerk in a leather ware- house. This may have seemed worse, but at least it gave him leisure to write first a play and then a novel. H. E. Bates published his first book, The Two Sisters (1926), when he was twenty-one. In the next fifteen years he won a distinguished reputation as nov- elist, essayist, and short-story writer, particularly for his stories about English country life. In 1941 he was commissioned as a writer by the RAF, and under the pseudonym of “Flying Officer X”, wrote his two famous books of short stories — The Greatest People ’ in the World (1942) and How Sleep the Brave (1943), which wore followed in 1944, when Bates discarded his war-time pseudonym, by Fair Stood the Wind for France. This, and his subsequent novels of Burma, The Purple Plain (1947) and The Jacaranda Tree (1949), and of India, The Scarlet Sword (1950), stemming directly or indirectly from his war experience in the East, won him a new reputation and, apart from their success in Britain and America, have been translated into fifteen foreign languages. H. E. Bates was a prolific and widely anthologized story writer — he appeared more often than any other author in Edward J. O’Brien’s annual Best British Short Stories. His stories are nearly all concerned with the working class, and particularly with agricul- tural labourers or with those in small towns whose real background is of the country. They are simple people, whose small tragedies he has universalized. Among his later books The Feast of July (1954), The Darling Buds of May (1958), A Breath of French Air (1959), Now Sleeps 163
the Crimson Petal and Other Stories (1961), The Fabulous Mrs V. (1964), A Wedding Party (1965), The Four Beauties (1968), The Wild Cherry Three (1968) and two of his humorous trilogy of books about the Larkin family have appeared. Lardner, Ringold Wilmer (1885—1933) was known as a sports writer and columnist in Chicago and New York before the great success of his short stories. His first collection, You Know Me, Al', A Bushers Letters (1916) describes the career of a novice on a professional team, revealing an illiterate, boasting, moronic baseball player and his world. Other hooks of this early period, displaying the author’s talent for the humorous use of the vernacular in portraying typical Americans include Bib Ballads (1915), a collection of verse; Gullible's Travels (1917), satirical stories; Treat 'Em Bough (1918), and The Big Town (1921), a humorous novel. The publication of How to Write Short Stories (1924), a col- lection, first attracted critical attention to Lardner as a sardonic humourist exposing follies and vices through his characters’ con- versational speech. Though they seem to follow traditional meth- ods of American humour, his stories are actually cynical and mordant treatments of the subjects. The boxers, baseball players, salesmen, stock brokers, song writers, barbers, actresses, stenogra- phers, and other “average” characters whom he depicts are reduced by the author’s implied bitterness to their essential common- placeness, cruelty, viciousness, dullness, and stupidity. This pessimistic view, as well as his ability to reproduce the idioms and habits of mind of everyday people, continues to appear in Lardner’s later collections of short stories: What of It (1925), The Love Nest (1926), Bound Up (1929), and First and the Last (1934). O’Connor, Flannery (1925—1964) — American novelist, short- story writer. She graduated from the Woman’s College of Geor- gia, and received a M. A. degree from the Writer’s Workshop University of Iowa, in 1947. Although O’Connor acknowledged her indebtness to writers like Nathaniel West, William Faulkner, and Ring Lardner, her first novel, Wise Blood (1952), was an origi- nal production, notable for its grotesque portrayal of Southern life. Her colourful description and realistic dialogue are combined to produce a fascinating picture of Georgia backwoods society. Flannery O’Connor’s deep involvement in the South was real and penetrative. Belonging to the writers who have contributed in varying degrees to the Southern Renaissance, Flannery O’Con- nor concerns herself with tho deformed and the grotesque, most of whom are outside the average person’s experience. Her story or novel is always the slowly paced, leisurely uncovering of a series of unusual people and circumstances. The majority of Flannery O’Connor’s stories appeared either in A Good Man Is Hard to Find (1955) or in the posthumous col- lection Everything That Rises Must Converge (1965). They have fairly similar Southern settings and exploit the problems of vio- lence, redemption and grotesquerie which have always obsessed 164
her. But Flannery’ O’Connor is always patient enough to explain the source of the moral, physical, or spiritual discomfort and has way of building her story upon it. Her prime concern seems to be with oddity of character but always within the demands of nar- rative expression. Flannery O’Connor’s work brought her various kinds of re- cognition, such as the Kenyon Review Fellowship (1952), a Ford Foundation Grant (1959), and two O. Henry Short Story Awards (1956 and 1963). Shaw, Irwin (1914) — novelist, short-story writer, playwright. Shaw left Brooklyn College after falling in freshman mathematics, worked in a cosmetics factory, a department store, and a furniture company. Returning to college he conducted a column for the student magazine and wrote plays for dramatic society. After his graduation in 1934 he prepared serials for the radio and then went to Hollywood to write screenplays. Irwin Shaw’s works are marked by dramatic intensity and social awareness. His plays include Bury the Dead (1936), Siege (1937), The Gentle People (1939), Retreat to Pleasure (1940), Sons and Soldiers (1944), The Assassin (1944), set in World War II, and Children from Their Games (1963), a comedy. His novels are The Young Lions (1948), one of the most important novels of World War II where the action takes place both in Europe and the L'nitcd States and the scenes of fascist barbarity give place to the realistic descriptions of the customs in the American army with its officers’ petty tyranny and national discrimination; The Trou- bled Air (1951) about radio actors; Lucy Crown (1956) about a middle-aged woman’s romance; Two Weeks in Another Town (1960), and Voices of a Summer Day (1965), a middle-aged man’s bitter- sweet memories. Sailor off the Bremen (1939), Welcome to the City (1941), Act of Faith (1946), Mixed Faith (1950), Tip on a Dead Jockey (1957), and Love on a Dark Street (1965) — collections of stories. Spark, Muriel (1918) was born and educated in Edinburgh, and spent some years in Central Africa. She returned to Britain during the war and worked in the Political Intelligence Depart- ment of the Foreign Office. She subsequently edited two poetry magazines, and her pub- lished works include critical biographies of nineteenth-century figures, and editions of nineteenth-century letters. A volume of her poems has also been published. In 1951 she was awarded first prize in an Observer short-story competition and her stories have appeared in many English and American magazines. Her first novel, The Comforters, was published in 1957, nnd this was followed by Robinson (1958), The Go-Away Bird and Other . Stories (1958), Memento Mori (1959), The Ballad of Peclcham Rye (1960), The Bachelors (1960), Voices at Play (1961), and The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1961). Iler play, Doctors of Philosophy, was produced In London III 1962. 10П
Thurber, James (1894—1961), a writer and artist, is con- sidered by many the best American humourist since Mark Twain. He was born in Columbus, Ohio, and educated at its public schools. Thurber entered Ohio State University in 1913 and took a year off to read texts not in the curriculum. When World War I broke out he was refused by the Army be- cause of poor eye-sight, spent 1917—1918 as a clerk in the State Department at Washington and Paris, then returned to Columbus to complete his studies in 1919. Until 1927 he worked as a repor- ter in Columbus, Paris, and New York. In 1927 began Thurber’s life-long association with The New Yorker, in which most of his ‘work first appeared. Of The New Yorker and its editor, Harold Ross, Thurber wrote a personal history, The Years.with Ross (1958). Thurber was probably the only contemporary American humour- ist whose work is considered by the most critics to be a genuine contribution to the nation’s literature. The substance of Thurber’s writing is what gives it dura- bility. His humour conveys a depth and consistency of thought and feeling which make it eminently readable. Thurber’s outlook is that in modern society irony itself becomes an instrumentforchange:notthatexternalconditionsmay be altered; but irony can anable one to accept things as-they are, so that ono .does not waste himself tilting at the unchangeable, so that one’s anger at external circumstances does not become self-destructive. Comedy, for Thurber, is a means both for making man aware of his condition, and for rendering life more tolerable. “Humour... is the only solvent of terror and tension.” Through comedy, man may come to awareness and acceptance of his world. Thurber ranged widely in his work. He will always be known primarily as a comic writer but many of his stories venture into fantasy of the most delicate and thoughtful line. The story The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, for example, a favourite among Thurber readers, describes the fantasies of an average man who pictures himself doing heroic deeds and tries to escape reality into a world of popular fiction cliches, but these cliches only emphasize the distance between Mitty’s self and popular masculine stereotypes. Some of his funniest essays deal with events in his childhood, home, events which he claims to have resounded with no more than simple veracity. His essays, sketches, fables, stories, parables, and reminiscences, illustrated by his distinctive drawings, include My Life and Hard Times (1933), amusing recollections; The Mid- dle-Aged Man on the Flying Trapeze (1935), Let Your Mind Alone (1937), satirizing inspirational book and popularizations of psychol- ogy; The Last Flower (1939), an ironic parable of modern war; Fables of Our Time, and'FamousPoemsIllustrated (1940); My World— and Welcome to It (1942), essays, sketches, and stories, including the well-known tale The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, and many others. While a keen satirical sense is shown in many essays, paro- dies and burlesques, a gentle humour pervades such fairy tales as The 13 Clocks (1950). Seriously a writer and only incidentally a comic artist, Thurber produced both writings and drawings showing odd characters in astonishing situations. The best collection of his writing and drawings is The Thurber Carnival (1945). 166
James Thurber’s stories, essays and cartoons have had people laughing for years. But like all humourists, Thurber did not write simply to make people laugh. Very often his hilarious stories are a criticism of some aspect of life; they are his way of saying something serious or even pathetic about the human condition. Warren, Robert Penn (1905) — poet, novelist, teacher. He was educated at Vanderbilt University, the University of California and Yale University, and has taught at Southwestern College, Vanderbilt and Louisiana State Universities, the University of Michigan, and Yale. His contributions to the Fugitive (1922—25) while he was still an undergraduate, reflected his militant interest in the South. He helped found and edit The Southern Review (1935—42); and with Albert Erskine edited two anthologies: A Southern Harvest (1937) and A New Southern Harvest (1957). Warren’s early reputation was made, however, with his poetry, which showed him to be a writer with a finely controlled talent for vivid metaphor and brilliant descriptions. Among his collections are Thirty-Six Poems (1935), Eleven Poems on the Same Theme (1942), Selected Poems 1923—1943 (1944), Brother to Dragons (1953), Promises: Poems 1954—56 (1957). Warren’s prose fiction won him a wider audience.-His first novel, Night Rider (1939), is a story of the Kentucky Tobacco War of 1904, At Heaven's Gate (1943) was suggested by the career of Luke Lea, a corrupt Tennessee businessman and polititian. All the King's Men (1946), Warren’s most popular novel, drew partly from the career of Huey Long, American public official, one of the most bizarre and audacious figures in public life in America in the 20th century, for its account of vicious politics in a Southern state; it won a Pulitzer prize and was made into powerful motion picture (1949). Circus in the Attic (1948) is a collection of two novelettes and twelve short stories. A murder in Frankfort, Kentucky (1826), the famous “Kentucky Tragedy”, gave Warren the story for World Enough and Time (1950). Band of Angels (1955) is a tale of miscegenation in the Civil War era. The Cave (1959) is a philosophical novel, and Wilderness (1961), a historical novel of the Civil War period, that represents Warren’s most significant accomplishment in the genre of the historical novel. Its main hero Adam Rosenzweig has left a Bavarian ghetto and sailed for America to join the Union Army. Wilderness is the story of Adam’s adventures in America, his growth, by experience, to a deeper understanding of himself and of the world he must accept. Wilderness is the author’s attempt to make human sense of the War and to dramatize this meaning so that it appeals to the emotional, imaginative and spiritual sides of man. Among his later works Flood (1964), a novel, Who Speaks for the Negro (1965), a work in journalism, and Selected Poems (1966). Warren is known equally as well for his wont as a critic and scholar. A college textbook by him and Cleanth BrooKS, Under- standing Poetry (1938), has probably been the most; influential single factor in shaping the teaching of English in America during 167
the 20th century. His essays have been widely published in the literary journals, and his Selected Essays appeared in 1958. Welty, Eudora (1909) — American novelist, short-story writ- er. Eudora Welty attended Mississippi State College for Women and graduated from the University of Wisconsin. She studied ad- vertising at Columbia University and worked at miscellaneous writing and publicity jobs before she began to write seriously. In her works she concentrates on the small-town Mississippi lito she knows so well. Her first stories won instant critical acclaim, but it was some time before the reading public recognized her talents. Eudora Welty’s books include A Curtain of Green (1941), The Wide Net (1943), The Golden Apples (1949), and The Bride of the Innisfallen (1955), stories set mainly in her region and depict- ing characters, often grotesque, who fail to know themselves or their neighbours; The Robber Bridegroom (1942), a novelette combining fairy tale and ballad form, telling of the wooing of Rosamond, the daughter of a Mississippi planter, by a bandit chief; Delta Wedding (1946), a novel subtly revealing the sensibilities of a modern plantation family; The Ponder Heart (1954), a comic fantasy of small-town Mississippi life, dramatized in 1957; Place in Fiction (1957), an essay; The Optimist’s Daughter (1972), a novel. Miss Welty’s stories are “offbeat” accounts of extraordinary happenings in seemingly ordinary lives. Coupled with the uncanny accuracy of her colloquial speech, which she uses with richly comic effect, is a sense of the mysterious which gives her work an almost mythological dimension. Williams, Tennessee (Thomas Lanier Williams) (1914) — playwright, short-story writer, poet, novelist. During his early years Williams held many different jobs to support himself while writing short stories and plays that did not sell. He worked his way through the University of Iowa and in 1940 was awarded a Rockefeller fellowship to work on a play, Battle of A ngels,which was produced in Boston and closed after a few weeks. Williams later rewrote the play as Orpheus Descending (1957), which is a story of a corruption which bigotry breeds and the brutality with which it can explode. It is also the story of how love can revitalize human beings. His first successful play was The Glass Menagerie (1945), which won the New York Drama Critics Circle Award, and established him as a major American playwright. It is of the most tender of Williams’ plays, and establishes the theme of illusion versus reality — particularly of a lonely woman inhabiting a world of dreams — which recurs frequently in his work. Portrait of a Girl in Glass, included in this book, somewhat autobiographical and one of Williams’s best, became the source of The Glass Menagerie. Rich in detail, the story communicates the quality of southern gentlewomen who are unable to cope with contemporary society. Abnormally diffident, Laura, the main character of the story, made no positive movements, but stood in the shade as if she dreaded what the world might offer. 168
Williams continues this study with Blanche Du Bois of A Streetcar Named Desire (1947) showing the southern gentlewoman, the last representative of a dying culture, who is too delicate to withstand the crudeness and decay surrounding her. The conflict between her standards and those represented by her brother-in-law Stan Kowalski finally destroys her. It is the study of this final descent into madness, with all its implied comment about the two codes, that seems to interest the playwright. A Streetcar Named Desire won a Pulitzer prize. Summer and Smoke (1948) is a story of a soulful but repressed woman who is unable to respond to the vitality of the man she loves and is driven, by her dreams of purity, into lonely spinster- hood. The Rose Tattoo (1951) deals with Gulf Coast Sicilians with roisterous humour and sympathy. In Camino Real (1953) Williams experimented with literary and stage techniques. Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1955), which also won a Pulitzer prize, depicts bitter, abnormal family tensions in a struggle for control of a plantation, revealing the darkest side of life of wealthy Southern families. Williams’ latest plays are: Suddenly, Last Summer (1958) produced with Something Unbroken (1958) under the title Garden District, Sweet Bird of Youth (1959), Period of Adjustment (1960), and The Night of the iguana (1961), the last based on a short story in One Arm and Other Stories (1948), The Eccentrittes of a Nightin- gale (1964), The Milk Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore (1964), Slapstick Tragedy (1967), The Seven Descents of Myrtle (1968). Some of Tennessee Williams’ plays, such as The Glass Menagerie, A Streetcar Named Desire, Orpheus Descending, Sweet Bird of Youth were staged in Soviet theatres. Other work of Williams includes The Roman Spring of Mrs Stone (1950), a novel, and Hard Candy (1954), a collection of short stories. He collected several short plays in Twenty-Seven Wagons Full of Cotton and Other One-Act Plays (1946). He published one volume of poems, In the Winter of Cities (1955), and wrote the screenplay for the motion picture Baby Doll (1956), based on his Twenty-Seven Wagons Full of Cotton. t
COMMENTARIES ’ Old Folks’ Christmas sis (U. S. colloq.)= sister Cradle Snatchers and Sex — plays staged in New York in 4925 and 1926; both were long runs on the New York stage Von Kluck Alexander (1846—1934) — German general. At the opening of the First World War he commanded the First German Army in the invasion of Belgium and the subsequent drive on Paris. to break in — here: to insert cuff buttons to brat — here: to open up or to prepare a way Miss Bracegirdle Does Her Duty parfaitement (Fr.) — yes, indeed Bordeaux — a city in tho south of France Dover — a port in eastern Kent, England, on the Strait of - Dover (French, Pas de Calais), a strait 21 miles wide at the eastern end of the English Channel Calais — a French port on the English Channel, facing Dover Stone, Marcus (1840—1921) — English painter. Many of his pictures have been published as engravings and in this form have become well known to the public sponge-bag — an oil-skin case for a toilet sponge heigho = heigh-ho - Euclid — Athenian geometer who lived about 300 В. C. Cromwell, Oliver (1599—1658) — English general and states- man, lord-protector of England 1653—58 (after King Charles I Kad been executed) Lord Beaconsfield — Disraeli, Benjamin (1804—81), Earl of Beaconsfield, English statesman and novelist, prime minister 1867, 1874—80 Lincoln, Abraham (1809—65) — president of the United States (1861—65), and political leader of the Northern States in the American Civil War. He was assassinated in 1865. Darling, Grace — daughter of James Darling, keeper of tho Outer-Farne lighthouse, off the coast of Northumberland, who with her father in 1938 gallantly put out in a coble in a heavy sea and rescued several passengers of the wrecked “Forfarshire” steamer General Booth — Booth, William (1828—1912), founder of the Salvation Army, known as General Booth St. Bride or Saint Brigid (453?—523) — patroness of Ireland identified with Brigid, ancient Irish goddess of fire, fertility, and the manual arts to cloud (here fig.) — to overshadow, throw into the shado gossamer (here fig.) — flimsy, unimportant Sydney Carton — a character in Dickens’s A Tale of Two Cities and tried to coax the pin back — and tried to draw the pin back from its place (by persistent effort) Vincennes — a town in the department of Seine, a south- eastern suburb of Paris, just outside the walls and close to the Bois-de-Vinccnnes cafe complet (Fr.) — coffee with sugar and milk 170
evensong (Ecclesiastic) — tho service of evening prayer, or the time, usually near sunset, of saying it; a song or hymn sung at evening R. F. — French Republic (Republiquo Franfaise) The Catbird Seat Camels — a brand of cigarette F & S — the name of a firm or company the filing department — the department of an organization where catalogues, files and records are kept are you lifting the oxcart out of the ditch? (pejorative or sar- castic) — are you working hard? in spite of entering an objection and sustaining it(legal termi- nology) — in spite of inwardly agreeing with his own objection Are you tearing up the pea patch? Are you hollering down the rain barrel?, etc. — these expressions might have some meaning in a given context; here they are used simply to illustrate Mrs Barrow’s peculiar mode of speech and her pejorative attitude towards the work of others Arc you sitting in the catbird seat? = Are you sitting pretty? which means to be safe and at an advantage, to be in a favourable position, not to have any worries a Dodger fan — a supporter of the famous baseball team from New York known as “The Brooklyn Dodger” Red Barber — the name of a sports commentator going on a rampage (here: in a sporting sense) — to perform (to play) very energetically like a batter with three balls and no strikes on him — a situa- tion in a game of baseball in which the player with the bat has three opportunities of hitting the ball and has so far not missed any chances, in other words, he is “sitting pretty” to stand up (si.) — to keep waiting; he had stood up under it — he had tolerated and endured her impossible behaviour so well seasoning — here: moderating, adjusting memo (abbr. form of memorandum) — here', a note sent by the chief of a department to his staff: blue memo — here: a note con- taining some criticism or unfavourable comment the S of F & S — one of the partners (i. o. Schlosser) in the firm of F & S Luckies — a brand of cigarette the full name of which is "Lucky Strike” to drag a red herring across the trail — to divert somebody’s attention ducky (si.) — delightful; darling, dear the inactive file — file where schemes, plans, or projects which cannot be carried out are kept When the clicking in the lock started.,. — in many American apartment blocks there is a system whereby a visitor rings the bell next to the name of the person he wishes to see. These names and bells are arranged on a board next to the front door at street level. The ringing of the bell is heard in the appropriate apartment and the host by pressing a button inside his flat, can open the front door, thus allowing the visitor to enter the building. 171
Here’s nuts to ... — an expression of contempt, similar in meaning to “To hell with”, hut here it is much milder because it is humourously used in the form of a toast to he coked to the gills (si.) — to be under the influence of a large amount of alcohol or, as in this case, narcotics That will be all of that. — That is enough of that sort of talk. . to call somebody on the carpet — to summon somebody in order to admonish him or administer some criticism (a more com- mon expression is to be on the carpet, i. e. to be reprimanded) The Unvexed Isles Ilippocrene — a fountain on Mount Helicon, Greece, tradi- tionally sacred to the Muses and regarded as a source of poetic inspiration English 40 — a course of English delivered by the professor in 1940 Baltimore — a port in Northern Maryland at the upper end of Chesapeake Bay Nebraska — a state in the north central United States; capital, Lincoln dyspeptic (fig.) — showing depression of spirit like that of a person suffering from dyspepsia; gloomy or pessimistic to hang up my stocking — the tradition is meant of using a stocking as'a receptacle for the presents supposed by children to be deposited in it by Santa Claus on Christmas eve Mother Sill — pills for the stomach Bermuda — an island group in the Western North Atlantic, comprising a British colony; capital, Hamilton Old Santy (colloq.) = Santa Claus Palmolive — a kind of soap Chaucer, Geoffrey (1340—1400) — the first great English poet. Chaucer’s writings fall into three periods: (1) The period of French influence in which he uses the octosyllabic couplet. To this period The Boice of the Duchesse (1369) and the Romaunt of the Rose, so far as written by Chaucer belong. (2) The period of Italian influence, in which he leaves off the octosyllabic couplet, uses mainly the “heroic” stanza of seven lines, and begins to use the heroic couplet. To this period belong The Hous of Fame, The Parle- ment of Foules, Troylus and Cryseyde, The Legende of Good Women; and the first drafts of some of his tales. (3) The period of his matu- rity, 1386—1400, in which he uses the heroic couplet. To this period belong the Canterbury Tales, designed about 1387. to let things go hang (colloq.) — to be indifferent to them, take no interest in or care of them a-glitter — in a glitter, glittering dash lamp — a carriage lamp fixed in the centre of the dash- board A Christmas Song squat — here-, thickset solo whist — kind of whist in which one player opposes three others 172
Oberland — a mountainous region of central Switzerland, specifically the Bernese Oberland (Bernese Alps) „ Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756—91) — great Austrian composer to be in leather — to be in leather business early Edwardian — pertaining to the time of Edward VII (1901—1910), a period often regarded latterly as ornate and over- genteel Rotarian — member of a Rotarian Club, international associ- ation of professional and business men in a town for the purpose of rendering services to the community Kaye, Danny (b. 1913) — American actor and entertainer to take up — here; to help in one’s singing, to encourage smb’s singing Schubert, Franz Peter (1797—1828) — Austrian composer. Schubert’s name was immortalized through his songs, the titles of nearly 500 of which are recorded. They were full of dramatic intensity, poetry and pathos and full of music of infinite beauty set to texts by Schiller, Goethe, Klopstock, to which he arranged accompaniments of complete fitness and endless variety. Brahms, Johannes (1833—1897) — famous German composer bind (si.) — a depressing or very dull person whizzo (as exclamation) — splendid clumsy — here: = clumsily Death of a Traveling Salesman chinaberry tree — cither of two trees (Sapindus saponaria and Sapindus marginatus) of the soapberry family; found in Mexico and the SW United States, where each is known as the China treo shotgun house — a house having a clear passageway straight through Confederate — a person who was on the side of the Confeder- ate States of America, a league of eleven southern States of the American Union that separated from the United States during the Civil War (1861—65) to git = to get readying — a verbal substantive from the verb to ready- = readiness to borry = to borrow Wistful, Delicately Gay eight-eighty = eighty eight yards bit-part — a small role in a play rave (adj., colloq.) — extravagantly enthusiastic to close on — here-, to draw near, approach, close to honey (U. S.) — to talk fondly or in a coaxing manner; to talk sweetly candily — adverb formed from the verb to candy — to make sweet, palatable, or agreeable legal — here: restrained, courteous to travel —here: to meet 173
a turkey (U.S. si.} == a play (occasionally, a motion picture) that is a failure What’s the good word? — a friendly, favourable, or lauda- tory utterance bereaved — deprived by death of a near relative, or of one connected by some endearing tie to kick oneself — to have remorse or regret to bring down the house — to evoke such demonstrative ap- plause as threatens or suggests the downfall of the building; to evoke wild applause or acclaim to block out — here: to obscure from view oysterish — of the nature of or resembling an oyster Portrait of a Girl in Glass Saint Louis — a settlement in Marion County, Oregon to slate — here: to write or set down for nomination or ap- pointment alley-cat — short-haired, mongrel cat which forages for food in alleys, etc. victrola — a make of phonograph, a trade name trying to ride two horses simultaneously in two opposite directions — trying to do two different things simultaneously Porter, Gene Stratton (1863—1924) — Indiana author of books for girls, including sentimental novels and nature studies illustrated by her own drawing. Пег most popular books are Freckles (1904) and A Girl of the Limberlost (1909). ' Star of Bethlehem — stated in the New Testament to have appeared in the sky at the time of the birth of Christ; Christmas tree decoration resembling its form undulant — here: undulating to haul one’s freight — here: to go, to travel Centralia — a city in Marion County salmon loaf — the crust of a loaf or roll of bread with a stuff- ing of salmon Sousa, John Philip (1854—1932) — American conductor, composer and author. Tn 1880 he as a composer of music established a “march style” of his own which came to be recognized throughout the world. At home and abroad he was known as tho “March King”. Wyoming — a state in the NW United States; capital, Cheyenne edifying — here: profitable blanc-mange [Ыэ'тэпз! (fr.) — jelly made with milk; used for desserts to cut the rug — here: to dance to let the cat out of the bag — to disclose the secret an’ — weakened from and The Black Madonna nah = ought not; the OE form made by the archaic negative ne (not) blended formerly with the verb owe Immaculate Conception — in the Roman Catholic Church, the doctrine that the Virgin Mary in the first instant of her con- ception was preserved free from all stain of original sin
Lourdes — a town in SW France; shrine and grotto o£ tho Virgin (Our Lady of Lourdes) doodle (colloq.) — a simpleton, noodle Observer — a Sunday paper founded in 1792 by William Clement. It added greatly to its popularity by the early adoption of wood engraving to illustrate sensational incidents. Victorian — pertaining to or characteristic of tho ideals and standards of morality and taste prevalent during the reign of Queen Victoria (1837—1901); prudish, conventional, narrow Austen, Jane (1775—1817) — a great English novelist. Of her completed novels Sense and Sensibility,.appeared in 1811, Pride and Prejudice An 1813, Mansfield Park in 1814, Emma in 1815, Northanger Abbey and Persuasion posthumously in 1818. Reader's Digest — a popular literary journal publishing books of world literature in abbreviation Queen, Woman’s Own — illustrated English periodicals designed for women’s interests Life — a popular illustrated weekly published in the U. S. A. News Chronicle — a London morning paper which resulted from the amalgamation of several papers, notably the Daily News and the Daily Chronicle in 1930 civic — here’, pertaining to a city Odeon = Odeum Haste thee, Nymph, and bring with thee Jest and youthful jollity, Quips and cranks, and wanton wiles, Nods, and becks, and wreathed smiles. — L’Allegro, a poem written in 1632 by John Milton (1608— 1674) Victoria Park — (217 acres) is in tho northeast of London, laid out and planted as a place of recreation for the poorer inhab- itants of this part of London Brasso — a special paste to polish brass things Dettol — an anticeptic liquid to get a tongue in one’s head = to have a tongue, to be sarcastic or ironic, to have a sharp tongue good and tired (colloq.) — very (completely) tired Everything That Rises Must Converge integrated (17. 5.) — made up of individuals, or groups of various cultural, economic, racial, etc., backgrounds functioning as a unit; cf. an integrated school to brace oneself (here fig.) — in sense of summoning up reso- lution for a task Saint Sebastian — a Roman soldier and Christian martyr who was shot to death with arrows for spreading Christianity; com- memorated on January 20 I ... won’t meet myself coming and going — I ... won’t meet myself here and there to stand — here: to endure, undergo, or submit to yo’ — an obsolete form of you living Jesus — a blasphemous oath
Contents Bing W. Lardner. Old Folk’s Christmas........... • > 3 Stacy Aumonier. Miss Bracegirdle Does Her Duty ........ 15 James Thurber. The CatbirdSeat....................... 33 Bobert Penn Warren. The Unvexed Isles.................. 44 H. E. Bates. A Christmas Song ....................... 56 Eudora Welty. Death of a Traveling Salesman ........... 67 Irwin Shaw. Wistful, Delicately Gay.................... 82 Tennessee Williams. Portrait of a Girl in Glass....... Ill Muriel Spark. The Black Madonna....................... 124 Flannery O’Connor. Everything That Rises Must Converge 145 List of Authors ...................................... 163 Commentaries ........................................ 170 ТИХИЕ ОСТРОВА Сборник рассказов на английском языке для студентов V курса педагогических институтов Редактор Я. П. Тихонов. Художник О. Г. Бетехтин. Художест- венный редактор В. В. Михневич. Технический редактор ' Я. И. Ленина. Корректор Я. Я. Зисман. Сдано в набор 10/VIII 1976 г. Подписано к печати 16/XI 1976 г. Бумага типографская Mi 2. Формат бумаги 84х1081/зг. Печ. л. 5,5. Уч.-изд. л. 10,17 Усл. печ. л. 9,24. Тираж 80.000 экз. Заказ № 790. Цена 29 к. Ленинградское отделение ордена Трудового Красного Знамени изда- тельства ..Просвещение" Государственного комитета Совета Минист- ров РСФСР по делам издательств, полиграфии и книжной торговли. 191186, Ленинград, Д-186. Невский пр., 28. Ордена Трудового Красного Знамени Ленинградское производственно- техническое объединение «Печатный Двор» имени А. М. Горького Со- юзполиграфпрома при Государственном комитете Совета Министров СССР по делам издательств, полиграфии и книжной торговли. 197136, Ленинград, П-136, Гатчинская ул., 26. Обложка отпечатана на Ленинградской фабрике офсетпой печати Ki 1 Союзполпграфпрома при Государственном комитете Совета Министров СССР по делам издательств, полиграфии и книжной торговли. 197101. Ленинград, П-101, Кронверкская ул., 7.