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The sun had not yet risen. The sea was indistinguishable from the
sky, except that the sea was slightly creased as if a cloth had
wrinkles in it. Gradually as the sky whitened a dark line lay on
the horizon dividing the sea from the sky and the grey cloth became
barred with thick strokes moving, one after another, beneath the
surface, following each other, pursuing each other, perpetually.
As they neared the shore each bar rose, heaped itself, broke and
swept a thin veil of white water across the sand. The wave paused,
and then drew out again, sighing like a sleeper whose breath comes
and goes unconsciously. Gradually the dark bar on the horizon
became clear as if the sediment in an old wine-bottle had sunk and
left the glass green. Behind it, too, the sky cleared as if the
white sediment there had sunk, or as if the arm of a woman couched
beneath the horizon had raised a lamp and flat bars of white, green
and yellow spread across the sky like the blades of a fan. Then
she raised her lamp higher and the air seemed to become fibrous and
to tear away from the green surface flickering and flaming in red
and yellow fibres like the smoky fire that roars from a bonfire.
Gradually the fibres of the burning bonfire were fused into one
haze, one incandescence which lifted the weight of the woollen grey
sky on top of it and turned it to a million atoms of soft blue.
The surface of the sea slowly became transparent and lay rippling
and sparkling until the dark stripes were almost rubbed out.
Slowly the arm that held the lamp raised it higher and then higher
until a broad flame became visible; an arc of fire burnt on the rim
of the horizon, and all round it the sea blazed gold.
The light struck upon the trees in the garden, making one leaf
transparent and then another. One bird chirped high up; there was
a pause; another chirped lower down. The sun sharpened the walls
of the house, and rested like the tip of a fan upon a white blind
and made a blue finger-print of shadow under the leaf by the
bedroom window. The blind stirred slightly, but all within was dim
and unsubstantial. The birds sang their blank melody outside.
'I see a ring,' said Bernard, 'hanging above me. It quivers and
hangs in a loop of light.'
'I see a slab of pale yellow,' said Susan, 'spreading away until it
meets a purple stripe.'
'I hear a sound,' said Rhoda, 'cheep, chirp; cheep chirp; going up
and down.'
'I see a globe,' said Neville, 'hanging down in a drop against the
enormous flanks of some hill.'
'I see a crimson tassel,' said Jinny, 'twisted with gold threads.'
'I hear something stamping,' said Louis. 'A great beast's foot is
chained. It stamps, and stamps, and stamps.'
'Look at the spider's web on the corner of the balcony,' said
Bernard. 'It has beads of water on it, drops of white light.'
'The leaves are gathered round the window like pointed ears,' said
Susan.
'A shadow falls on the path,' said Louis, 'like an elbow bent.'
'Islands of light are swimming on the grass,' said Rhoda. 'They
have fallen through the trees.'
'The birds' eyes are bright in the tunnels between the leaves,'
said Neville.
'The stalks are covered with harsh, short hairs,' said Jinny, 'and
drops of water have stuck to them.'
'A caterpillar is curled in a green ring,' said Susan, 'notched
with blunt feet.'
'The grey-shelled snail draws across the path and flattens the
blades behind him,' said Rhoda.
'And burning lights from the window-panes flash in and out on the
grasses,' said Louis.
'Stones are cold to my feet,' said Neville. 'I feel each one,
round or pointed, separately.'
'The back of my hand burns,' said Jinny, 'but the palm is clammy
and damp with dew.'
'Now the cock crows like a spurt of hard, red water in the white
tide,' said Bernard.
'Birds are singing up and down and in and out all round us,' said
Susan.
'The beast stamps; the elephant with its foot chained; the great
brute on the beach stamps,' said Louis.
'Look at the house,' said Jinny, 'with all its windows white with
blinds.'
'Cold water begins to run from the scullery tap,' said Rhoda, 'over
the mackerel in the bowl.'
'The walls are cracked with gold cracks,' said Bernard, 'and there
are blue, finger-shaped shadows of leaves beneath the windows.'
'Now Mrs Constable pulls up her thick black stockings,' said Susan.
'When the smoke rises, sleep curls off the roof like a mist,' said
Louis.
'The birds sang in chorus first,' said Rhoda. 'Now the scullery
door is unbarred. Off they fly. Off they fly like a fling of
seed. But one sings by the bedroom window alone.'
'Bubbles form on the floor of the saucepan,' said Jinny. 'Then
they rise, quicker and quicker, in a silver chain to the top.'
'Now Billy scrapes the fish-scales with a jagged knife on to a
wooden board,' said Neville.
'The dining-room window is dark blue now,' said Bernard, 'and the
air ripples above the chimneys.'
'A swallow is perched on the lightning-conductor,' said Susan.
'And Biddy has smacked down the bucket on the kitchen flags.'
'That is the first stroke of the church bell,' said Louis. 'Then
the others follow; one, two; one, two; one, two.'
'Look at the table-cloth, flying white along the table,' said
Rhoda. 'Now there are rounds of white china, and silver streaks
beside each plate.'
'Suddenly a bee booms in my ear,' said Neville. 'It is here; it is
past.'
'I burn, I shiver,' said Jinny, 'out of this sun, into this
shadow.'
'Now they have all gone,' said Louis. 'I am alone. They have gone
into the house for breakfast, and I am left standing by the wall
among the flowers. It is very early, before lessons. Flower after
flower is specked on the depths of green. The petals are
harlequins. Stalks rise from the black hollows beneath. The
flowers swim like fish made of light upon the dark, green waters.
I hold a stalk in my hand. I am the stalk. My roots go down to
the depths of the world, through earth dry with brick, and damp
earth, through veins of lead and silver. I am all fibre. All
tremors shake me, and the weight of the earth is pressed to my
ribs. Up here my eyes are green leaves, unseeing. I am a boy in
grey flannels with a belt fastened by a brass snake up here. Down
there my eyes are the lidless eyes of a stone figure in a desert by
the Nile. I see women passing with red pitchers to the river; I
see camels swaying and men in turbans. I hear tramplings,
tremblings, stirrings round me.
'Up here Bernard, Neville, Jinny and Susan (but not Rhoda) skim the
flower-beds with their nets. They skim the butterflies from the
nodding tops of the flowers. They brush the surface of the world.
Their nets are full of fluttering wings. "Louis! Louis! Louis!"
they shout. But they cannot see me. I am on the other side of the
hedge. There are only little eye-holes among the leaves. Oh Lord,
let them pass. Lord, let them lay their butterflies on a pocket-
handkerchief on the gravel. Let them count out their tortoise-
shells, their red admirals and cabbage whites. But let me be
unseen. I am green as a yew tree in the shade of the hedge. My
hair is made of leaves. I am rooted to the middle of the earth.
My body is a stalk. I press the stalk. A drop oozes from the hole
at the mouth and slowly, thickly, grows larger and larger. Now
something pink passes the eyehole. Now an eye-beam is slid through
the chink. Its beam strikes me. I am a boy in a grey flannel
suit. She has found me. I am struck on the nape of the neck. She
has kissed me. All is shattered.'
'I was running,' said Jinny, 'after breakfast. I saw leaves moving
in a hole in the hedge. I thought "That is a bird on its nest." I
parted them and looked; but there was no bird on a nest. The
leaves went on moving. I was frightened. I ran past Susan, past
Rhoda, and Neville and Bernard in the tool-house talking. I cried
as I ran, faster and faster. What moved the leaves? What moves my
heart, my legs? And I dashed in here, seeing you green as a bush,
like a branch, very still, Louis, with your eyes fixed. "Is he
dead?" I thought, and kissed you, with my heart jumping under my
pink frock like the leaves, which go on moving, though there is
nothing to move them. Now I smell geraniums; I smell earth mould.
I dance. I ripple. I am thrown over you like a net of light. I
lie quivering flung over you.'
'Through the chink in the hedge,' said Susan, 'I saw her kiss him.
I raised my head from my flower-pot and looked through a chink in
the hedge. I saw her kiss him. I saw them, Jinny and Louis,
kissing. Now I will wrap my agony inside my pocket-handkerchief.
It shall be screwed tight into a ball. I will go to the beech wood
alone, before lessons. I will not sit at a table, doing sums. I
will not sit next Jinny and next Louis. I will take my anguish and
lay it upon the roots under the beech trees. I will examine it and
take it between my fingers. They will not find me. I shall eat
nuts and peer for eggs through the brambles and my hair will be
matted and I shall sleep under hedges and drink water from ditches
and die there.'
'Susan has passed us,' said Bernard. 'She has passed the tool-
house door with her handkerchief screwed into a ball. She was not
crying, but her eyes, which are so beautiful, were narrow as cats'
eyes before they spring. I shall follow her, Neville. I shall go
gently behind her, to be at hand, with my curiosity, to comfort her
when she bursts out in a rage and thinks, "I am alone."
'Now she walks across the field with a swing, nonchalantly, to
deceive us. Then she comes to the dip; she thinks she is unseen;
she begins to run with her fists clenched in front of her. Her
nails meet in the ball of her pocket-handkerchief. She is making
for the beech woods out of the light. She spreads her arms as she
comes to them and takes to the shade like a swimmer. But she is
blind after the light and trips and flings herself down on the
roots under the trees, where the light seems to pant in and out, in
and out. The branches heave up and down. There is agitation and
trouble here. There is gloom. The light is fitful. There is
anguish here. The roots make a skeleton on the ground, with dead
leaves heaped in the angles. Susan has spread her anguish out.
Her pocket-handkerchief is laid on the roots of the beech trees and
she sobs, sitting crumpled where she has fallen.'
'I saw her kiss him,' said Susan. 'I looked between the leaves and
saw her. She danced in flecked with diamonds light as dust. And I
am squat, Bernard, I am short. I have eyes that look close to the
ground and see insects in the grass. The yellow warmth in my side
turned to stone when I saw Jinny kiss Louis. I shall eat grass and
die in a ditch in the brown water where dead leaves have rotted.'
'I saw you go,' said Bernard. 'As you passed the door of the tool-
house I heard you cry "I am unhappy." I put down my knife. I was
making boats out of firewood with Neville. And my hair is untidy,
because when Mrs Constable told me to brush it there was a fly in a
web, and I asked, "Shall I free the fly? Shall I let the fly be
eaten?" So I am late always. My hair is unbrushed and these chips
of wood stick in it. When I heard you cry I followed you, and saw
you put down your handkerchief, screwed up, with its rage, with its
hate, knotted in it. But soon that will cease. Our bodies are
close now. You hear me breathe. You see the beetle too carrying
off a leaf on its back. It runs this way, then that way, so that
even your desire while you watch the beetle, to possess one single
thing (it is Louis now) must waver, like the light in and out of
the beech leaves; and then words, moving darkly, in the depths of
your mind will break up this knot of hardness, screwed in your
pocket-handkerchief.'
'I love,' said Susan, 'and I hate. I desire one thing only. My
eyes are hard. Jinny's eyes break into a thousand lights. Rhoda's
are like those pale flowers to which moths come in the evening.
Yours grow full and brim and never break. But I am already set on
my pursuit. I see insects in the grass. Though my mother still
knits white socks for me and hems pinafores and I am a child, I
love and I hate.'
'But when we sit together, close,' said Bernard, 'we melt into each
other with phrases. We are edged with mist. We make an
unsubstantial territory.'
'I see the beetle,' said Susan. 'It is black, I see; it is green,
I see; I am tied down with single words. But you wander off; you
slip away; you rise up higher, with words and words in phrases.'
'Now,' said Bernard, 'let us explore. There is the white house
lying among the trees. It lies down there ever so far beneath us.
We shall sink like swimmers just touching the ground with the tips
of their toes. We shall sink through the green air of the leaves,
Susan. We sink as we run. The waves close over us, the beech
leaves meet above our heads. There is the stable clock with its
gilt hands shining. Those are the flats and heights of the roofs
of the great house. There is the stable-boy clattering in the yard
in rubber boots. That is Elvedon.
'Now we have fallen through the tree-tops to the earth. The air no
longer rolls its long, unhappy, purple waves over us. We touch
earth; we tread ground. That is the close-clipped hedge of the
ladies' garden. There they walk at noon, with scissors, clipping
roses. Now we are in the ringed wood with the wall round it. This
is Elvedon. I have seen signposts at the cross-roads with one arm
pointing "To Elvedon". No one has been there. The ferns smell
very strong, and there are red funguses growing beneath them. Now
we wake the sleeping daws who have never seen a human form; now we
tread on rotten oak apples, red with age and slippery. There is a
ring of wall round this wood; nobody comes here. Listen! That is
the flop of a giant toad in the undergrowth; that is the patter of
some primeval fir-cone falling to rot among the ferns.
'Put your foot on this brick. Look over the wall. That is
Elvedon. The lady sits between the two long windows, writing. The
gardeners sweep the lawn with giant brooms. We are the first to
come here. We are the discoverers of an unknown land. Do not
stir; if the gardeners saw us they would shoot us. We should be
nailed like stoats to the stable door. Look! Do not move. Grasp
the ferns tight on the top of the wall.'
'I see the lady writing. I see the gardeners sweeping,' said
Susan. 'If we died here, nobody would bury us.'
'Run!' said Bernard. 'Run! The gardener with the black beard has
seen us! We shall be shot! We shall be shot like jays and pinned
to the wall! We are in a hostile country. We must escape to the
beech wood. We must hide under the trees. I turned a twig as we
came. There is a secret path. Bend as low as you can. Follow
without looking back. They will think we are foxes. Run!
'Now we are safe. Now we can stand upright again. Now we can
stretch our arms in this high canopy, in this vast wood. I hear
nothing. That is only the murmur of the waves in the air. That is
a wood-pigeon breaking cover in the tops of the beech trees. The
pigeon beats the air; the pigeon beats the air with wooden wings.'
'Now you trail away,' said Susan, 'making phrases. Now you mount
like an air-ball's string, higher and higher through the layers of
the leaves, out of reach. Now you lag. Now you tug at my skirts,
looking back, making phrases. You have escaped me. Here is the
garden. Here is the hedge. Here is Rhoda on the path rocking
petals to and fro in her brown basin.'
'All my ships are white,' said Rhoda. 'I do not want red petals of
hollyhocks or geranium. I want white petals that float when I tip
the basin up. I have a fleet now swimming from shore to shore. I
will drop a twig in as a raft for a drowning sailor. I will drop a
stone in and see bubbles rise from the depths of the sea. Neville
has gone and Susan has gone; Jinny is in the kitchen garden picking
currants with Louis perhaps. I have a short time alone, while Miss
Hudson spreads our copy-books on the schoolroom table. I have a
short space of freedom. I have picked all the fallen petals and
made them swim. I have put raindrops in some. I will plant a
lighthouse here, a head of Sweet Alice. And I will now rock the
brown basin from side to side so that my ships may ride the waves.
Some will founder. Some will dash themselves against the cliffs.
One sails alone. That is my ship. It sails into icy caverns where
the sea-bear barks and stalactites swing green chains. The waves
rise; their crests curl; look at the lights on the mastheads. They
have scattered, they have foundered, all except my ship, which
mounts the wave and sweeps before the gale and reaches the islands
where the parrots chatter and the creepers . . .'
'Where is Bernard?' said Neville. 'He has my knife. We were in
the tool-shed making boats, and Susan came past the door. And
Bernard dropped his boat and went after her taking my knife, the
sharp one that cuts the keel. He is like a dangling wire, a broken
bell-pull, always twangling. He is like the seaweed hung outside
the window, damp now, now dry. He leaves me in the lurch; he
follows Susan; and if Susan cries he will take my knife and tell
her stories. The big blade is an emperor; the broken blade a
Negro. I hate dangling things; I hate dampish things. I hate
wandering and mixing things together. Now the bell rings and we
shall be late. Now we must drop our toys. Now we must go in
together. The copy-books are laid out side by side on the green
baize table.'
'I will not conjugate the verb,' said Louis, 'until Bernard has
said it. My father is a banker in Brisbane and I speak with an
Australian accent. I will wait and copy Bernard. He is English.
They are all English. Susan's father is a clergyman. Rhoda has no
father. Bernard and Neville are the sons of gentlemen. Jinny
lives with her grandmother in London. Now they suck their pens.
Now they twist their copy-books, and, looking sideways at Miss
Hudson, count the purple buttons on her bodice. Bernard has a chip
in his hair. Susan has a red look in her eyes. Both are flushed.
But I am pale; I am neat, and my knickerbockers are drawn together
by a belt with a brass snake. I know the lesson by heart. I know
more than they will ever know. I knew my cases and my genders; I
could know everything in the world if I wished. But I do not wish
to come to the top and say my lesson. My roots are threaded, like
fibres in a flower-pot, round and round about the world. I do not
wish to come to the top and live in the light of this great clock,
yellow-faced, which ticks and ticks. Jinny and Susan, Bernard and
Neville bind themselves into a thong with which to lash me. They
laugh at my neatness, at my Australian accent. I will now try to
imitate Bernard softly lisping Latin.'
'Those are white words,' said Susan, 'like stones one picks up by
the seashore.'
'They flick their tails right and left as I speak them,' said
Bernard. 'They wag their tails; they flick their tails; they move
through the air in flocks, now this way, now that way, moving all
together, now dividing, now coming together.'
'Those are yellow words, those are fiery words,' said Jinny. 'I
should like a fiery dress, a yellow dress, a fulvous dress to wear
in the evening.'
'Each tense,' said Neville, 'means differently. There is an order
in this world; there are distinctions, there are differences in
this world, upon whose verge I step. For this is only a
beginning.'
'Now Miss Hudson,' said Rhoda, 'has shut the book. Now the terror
is beginning. Now taking her lump of chalk she draws figures, six,
seven, eight, and then a cross and then a line on the blackboard.
What is the answer? The others look; they look with understanding.
Louis writes; Susan writes; Neville writes; Jinny writes; even
Bernard has now begun to write. But I cannot write. I see only
figures. The others are handing in their answers, one by one. Now
it is my turn. But I have no answer. The others are allowed to
go. They slam the door. Miss Hudson goes. I am left alone to
find an answer. The figures mean nothing now. Meaning has gone.
The clock ticks. The two hands are convoys marching through a
desert. The black bars on the clock face are green oases. The
long hand has marched ahead to find water. The other, painfully
stumbles among hot stones in the desert. It will die in the
desert. The kitchen door slams. Wild dogs bark far away. Look,
the loop of the figure is beginning to fill with time; it holds the
world in it. I begin to draw a figure and the world is looped in
it, and I myself am outside the loop; which I now join--so--and
seal up, and make entire. The world is entire, and I am outside of
it, crying, "Oh save me, from being blown for ever outside the loop
of time!"'
'There Rhoda sits staring at the blackboard,' said Louis, 'in the
schoolroom, while we ramble off, picking here a bit of thyme,
pinching here a leaf of southernwood while Bernard tells a story.
Her shoulder-blades meet across her back like the wings of a small
butterfly. And as she stares at the chalk figures, her mind lodges
in those white circles, it steps through those white loops into
emptiness, alone. They have no meaning for her. She has no answer
for them. She has no body as the others have. And I, who speak
with an Australian accent, whose father is a banker in Brisbane, do
not fear her as I fear the others.'
'Let us now crawl,' said Bernard, 'under the canopy of the currant
leaves, and tell stories. Let us inhabit the underworld. Let us
take possession of our secret territory, which is lit by pendant
currants like candelabra, shining red on one side, black on the
other. Here, Jinny, if we curl up close, we can sit under the
canopy of the currant leaves and watch the censers swing. This is
our universe. The others pass down the carriage-drive. The skirts
of Miss Hudson and Miss Curry sweep by like candle extinguishers.
Those are Susan's white socks. Those are Louis' neat sand-shoes
firmly printing the gravel. Here come warm gusts of decomposing
leaves, of rotting vegetation. We are in a swamp now; in a
malarial jungle. There is an elephant white with maggots, killed
by an arrow shot dead in its eye. The bright eyes of hopping
birds--eagles, vultures--are apparent. They take us for fallen
trees. They pick at a worm--that is a hooded cobra--and leave it
with a festering brown scar to be mauled by lions. This is our
world, lit with crescents and stars of light; and great petals half
transparent block the openings like purple windows. Everything is
strange. Things are huge and very small. The stalks of flowers
are thick as oak trees. Leaves are high as the domes of vast
cathedrals. We are giants, lying here, who can make forests
quiver.'
'This is here,' said Jinny, 'this is now. But soon we shall go.
Soon Miss Curry will blow her whistle. We shall walk. We shall
part. You will go to school. You will have masters wearing
crosses with white ties. I shall have a mistress in a school on
the East Coast who sits under a portrait of Queen Alexandra. That
is where I am going, and Susan and Rhoda. This is only here; this
is only now. Now we lie under the currant bushes and every time
the breeze stirs we are mottled all over. My hand is like a
snake's skin. My knees are pink floating islands. Your face is
like an apple tree netted under.'
'The heat is going,' said Bernard, 'from the Jungle. The leaves
flap black wings over us. Miss Curry has blown her whistle on the
terrace. We must creep out from the awning of the currant leaves
and stand upright. There are twigs in your hair, Jinny. There is
a green caterpillar on your neck. We must form, two by two. Miss
Curry is taking us for a brisk walk, while Miss Hudson sits at her
desk settling her accounts.'
'It is dull,' said Jinny, 'walking along the high road with no
windows to look at, with no bleared eyes of blue glass let into the
pavement.'
'We must form into pairs,' said Susan, 'and walk in order, not
shuffling our feet, not lagging, with Louis going first to lead us,
because Louis is alert and not a wool-gatherer.'
'Since I am supposed,' said Neville, 'to be too delicate to go with
them, since I get so easily tired and then am sick, I will use this
hour of solitude, this reprieve from conversation, to coast round
the purlieus of the house and recover, if I can, by standing on the
same stair half-way up the landing, what I felt when I heard about
the dead man through the swing-door last night when cook was
shoving in and out the dampers. He was found with his throat cut.
The apple-tree leaves became fixed in the sky; the moon glared; I
was unable to lift my foot up the stair. He was found in the
gutter. His blood gurgled down the gutter. His jowl was white as
a dead codfish. I shall call this stricture, this rigidity, "death
among the apple trees" for ever. There were the floating, pale-
grey clouds; and the immitigable tree; the implacable tree with its
greaved silver bark. The ripple of my life was unavailing. I was
unable to pass by. There was an obstacle. "I cannot surmount this
unintelligible obstacle," I said. And the others passed on. But
we are doomed, all of us, by the apple trees, by the immitigable
tree which we cannot pass.
'Now the stricture and rigidity are over; and I will continue to
make my survey of the purlieus of the house in the late afternoon,
in the sunset, when the sun makes oleaginous spots on the linoleum,
and a crack of light kneels on the wall, making the chair legs look
broken.'
'I saw Florrie in the kitchen garden,' said Susan, 'as we came back
from our walk, with the washing blown out round her, the pyjamas,
the drawers, the night-gowns blown tight. And Ernest kissed her.
He was in his green baize apron, cleaning silver; and his mouth was
sucked like a purse in wrinkles and he seized her with the pyjamas
blown out hard between them. He was blind as a bull, and she
swooned in anguish, only little veins streaking her white cheeks
red. Now though they pass plates of bread and butter and cups of
milk at tea-time I see a crack in the earth and hot steam hisses
up; and the urn roars as Ernest roared, and I am blown out hard
like the pyjamas, even while my teeth meet in the soft bread and
butter, and I lap the sweet milk. I am not afraid of heat, nor of
the frozen winter. Rhoda dreams, sucking a crust soaked in milk;
Louis regards the wall opposite with snail-green eyes; Bernard
moulds his bread into pellets and calls them "people". Neville
with his clean and decisive ways has finished. He has rolled his
napkin and slipped it through the silver ring. Jinny spins her
fingers on the table-cloth, as if they were dancing in the
sunshine, pirouetting. But I am not afraid of the heat or of the
frozen winter.'
'Now,' said Louis, 'we all rise; we all stand up. Miss Curry
spreads wide the black book on the harmonium. It is difficult not
to weep as we sing, as we pray that God may keep us safe while we
sleep, calling ourselves little children. When we are sad and
trembling with apprehension it is sweet to sing together, leaning
slightly, I towards Susan, Susan towards Bernard, clasping hands,
afraid of much, I of my accent, Rhoda of figures; yet resolute to
conquer.'
'We troop upstairs like ponies,' said Bernard, 'stamping,
clattering one behind another to take our turns in the bathroom.
We buffet, we tussle, we spring up and down on the hard, white
beds. My turn has come. I come now.
'Mrs Constable, girt in a bath-towel, takes her lemon-coloured
sponge and soaks it in water; it turns chocolate-brown; it drips;
and, holding it high above me, shivering beneath her, she squeezes
it. Water pours down the runnel of my spine. Bright arrows of
sensation shoot on either side. I am covered with warm flesh. My
dry crannies are wetted; my cold body is warmed; it is sluiced and
gleaming. Water descends and sheets me like an eel. Now hot
towels envelop me, and their roughness, as I rub my back, makes my
blood purr. Rich and heavy sensations form on the roof of my mind;
down showers the day--the woods; and Elvedon; Susan and the pigeon.
Pouring down the walls of my mind, running together, the day falls
copious, resplendent. Now I tie my pyjamas loosely round me, and
lie under this thin sheet afloat in the shallow light which is like
a film of water drawn over my eyes by a wave. I hear through it
far off, far away, faint and far, the chorus beginning; wheels;
dogs; men shouting; church bells; the chorus beginning.'
'As I fold up my frock and my chemise,' said Rhoda, 'so I put off
my hopeless desire to be Susan, to be Jinny. But I will stretch my
toes so that they touch the rail at the end of the bed; I will
assure myself, touching the rail, of something hard. Now I cannot
sink; cannot altogether fall through the thin sheet now. Now I
spread my body on this frail mattress and hang suspended. I am
above the earth now. I am no longer upright, to be knocked against
and damaged. All is soft, and bending. Walls and cupboards whiten
and bend their yellow squares on top of which a pale glass gleams.
Out of me now my mind can pour. I can think of my Armadas sailing
on the high waves. I am relieved of hard contacts and collisions.
I sail on alone under the white cliffs. Oh, but I sink, I fall!
That is the corner of the cupboard; that is the nursery looking-
glass. But they stretch, they elongate. I sink down on the black
plumes of sleep; its thick wings are pressed to my eyes.
Travelling through darkness I see the stretched flower-beds, and
Mrs Constable runs from behind the corner of the pampas-grass to
say my aunt has come to fetch me in a carriage. I mount; I escape;
I rise on spring-heeled boots over the tree-tops. But I am now
fallen into the carriage at the hall door, where she sits nodding
yellow plumes with eyes hard like glazed marbles. Oh, to awake
from dreaming! Look, there is the chest of drawers. Let me pull
myself out of these waters. But they heap themselves on me; they
sweep me between their great shoulders; I am turned; I am tumbled;
I am stretched, among these long lights, these long waves, these
endless paths, with people pursuing, pursuing.'
The sun rose higher. Blue waves, green waves swept a quick fan
over the beach, circling the spike of sea-holly and leaving shallow
pools of light here and there on the sand. A faint black rim was
left behind them. The rocks which had been misty and soft hardened
and were marked with red clefts.
Sharp stripes of shadow lay on the grass, and the dew dancing on
the tips of the flowers and leaves made the garden like a mosaic of
single sparks not yet formed into one whole. The birds, whose
breasts were specked canary and rose, now sang a strain or two
together, wildly, like skaters rollicking arm-in-arm, and were
suddenly silent, breaking asunder.
The sun laid broader blades upon the house. The light touched
something green in the window corner and made it a lump of emerald,
a cave of pure green like stoneless fruit. It sharpened the edges
of chairs and tables and stitched white table-cloths with fine gold
wires. As the light increased a bud here and there split asunder
and shook out flowers, green veined and quivering, as if the effort
of opening had set them rocking, and pealing a faint carillon as
they beat their frail clappers against their white walls.
Everything became softly amorphous, as if the china of the plate
flowed and the steel of the knife were liquid. Meanwhile the
concussion of the waves breaking fell with muffled thuds, like logs
falling, on the shore.
'Now,' said Bernard, 'the time has come. The day has come. The
cab is at the door. My huge box bends George's bandy-legs even
wider. The horrible ceremony is over, the tips, and the good-byes
in the hall. Now there is this gulping ceremony with my mother,
this hand-shaking ceremony with my father; now I must go on waving,
I must go on waving, till we turn the corner. Now that ceremony is
over. Heaven be praised, all ceremonies are over. I am alone; I
am going to school for the first time.
'Everybody seems to be doing things for this moment only; and never
again. Never again. The urgency of it all is fearful. Everybody
knows I am going to school, going to school for the first time.
"That boy is going to school for the first time," says the
housemaid, cleaning the steps. I must not cry. I must behold them
indifferently. Now the awful portals of the station gape; "the
moon-faced clock regards me." I must make phrases and phrases and
so interpose something hard between myself and the stare of
housemaids, the stare of clocks, staring faces, indifferent faces,
or I shall cry. There is Louis, there is Neville, in long coats,
carrying handbags, by the booking-office. They are composed. But
they look different.'
'Here is Bernard,' said Louis. 'He is composed; he is easy. He
swings his bag as he walks. I will follow Bernard, because he is
not afraid. We are drawn through the booking-office on to the
platform as a stream draws twigs and straws round the piers of a
bridge. There is the very powerful, bottle-green engine without a
neck, all back and thighs, breathing steam. The guard blows his
whistle; the flag is dipped; without an effort, of its own
momentum, like an avalanche started by a gentle push, we start
forward. Bernard spreads a rug and plays knuckle-bones. Neville
reads. London crumbles. London heaves and surges. There is a
bristling of chimneys and towers. There a white church; there a
mast among the spires. There a canal. Now there are open spaces
with asphalt paths upon which it is strange that people should now
be walking. There is a hill striped with red houses. A man
crosses a bridge with a dog at his heels. Now the red boy begins
firing at a pheasant. The blue boy shoves him aside. "My uncle is
the best shot in England. My cousin is Master of Foxhounds."
Boasting begins. And I cannot boast, for my father is a banker in
Brisbane, and I speak with an Australian accent.'
'After all this hubbub,' said Neville, 'all this scuffling and
hubbub, we have arrived. This is indeed a moment--this is indeed a
solemn moment. I come, like a lord to his halls appointed. That
is our founder; our illustrious founder, standing in the courtyard
with one foot raised. I salute our founder. A noble Roman air
hangs over these austere quadrangles. Already the lights are lit
in the form rooms. Those are laboratories perhaps; and that a
library, where I shall explore the exactitude of the Latin
language, and step firmly upon the well-laid sentences, and
pronounce the explicit, the sonorous hexameters of Virgil, of
Lucretius; and chant with a passion that is never obscure or
formless the loves of Catullus, reading from a big book, a quarto
with margins. I shall lie, too, in the fields among the tickling
grasses. I shall lie with my friends under the towering elm trees.
'Behold, the Headmaster. Alas, that he should excite my ridicule.
He is too sleek, he is altogether too shiny and black, like some
statue in a public garden. And on the left side of his waistcoat,
his taut, his drum-like waistcoat, hangs a crucifix.'
'Old Crane,' said Bernard, 'now rises to address us. Old Crane,
the Headmaster, has a nose like a mountain at sunset, and a blue
cleft in his chin, like a wooded ravine, which some tripper has
fired; like a wooded ravine seen from the train window. He sways
slightly, mouthing out his tremendous and sonorous words. I love
tremendous and sonorous words. But his words are too hearty to be
true. Yet he is by this time convinced of their truth. And when
he leaves the room, lurching rather heavily from side to side, and
hurls his way through the swing-doors, all the masters, lurching
rather heavily from side to side, hurl themselves also through the
swing-doors. This is our first night at school, apart from our
sisters.'
'This is my first night at school,' said Susan, 'away from my
father, away from my home. My eyes swell; my eyes prick with
tears. I hate the smell of pine and linoleum. I hate the wind-
bitten shrubs and the sanitary tiles. I hate the cheerful jokes
and the glazed look of everyone. I left my squirrel and my doves
for the boy to look after. The kitchen door slams, and shot
patters among the leaves when Percy fires at the rooks. All here
is false; all is meretricious. Rhoda and Jinny sit far off in
brown serge, and look at Miss Lambert who sits under a picture of
Queen Alexandra reading from a book before her. There is also a
blue scroll of needlework embroidered by some old girl. If I do
not purse my lips, if I do not screw my handkerchief, I shall cry.'
'The purple light,' said Rhoda, 'in Miss Lambert's ring passes to
and fro across the black stain on the white page of the Prayer
Book. It is a vinous, it is an amorous light. Now that our boxes
are unpacked in the dormitories, we sit herded together under maps
of the entire world. There are desks with wells for the ink. We
shall write our exercises in ink here. But here I am nobody. I
have no face. This great company, all dressed in brown serge, has
robbed me of my identity. We are all callous, unfriended. I will
seek out a face, a composed, a monumental face, and will endow it
with omniscience, and wear it under my dress like a talisman and
then (I promise this) I will find some dingle in a wood where I can
display my assortment of curious treasures. I promise myself this.
So I will not cry.'
'That dark woman,' said Jinny, 'with high cheek-bones, has a shiny
dress, like a shell, veined, for wearing in the evening. That is
nice for summer, but for winter I should like a thin dress shot
with red threads that would gleam in the firelight. Then when the
lamps were lit, I should put on my red dress and it would be thin
as a veil, and would wind about my body, and billow out as I came
into the room, pirouetting. It would make a flower shape as I sank
down, in the middle of the room, on a gilt chair. But Miss Lambert
wears an opaque dress, that falls in a cascade from her snow-white
ruffle as she sits under a picture of Queen Alexandra pressing one
white finger firmly on the page. And we pray.'
'Now we march, two by two,' said Louis, 'orderly, processional,
into chapel. I like the dimness that falls as we enter the sacred
building. I like the orderly progress. We file in; we seat
ourselves. We put off our distinctions as we enter. I like it
now, when, lurching slightly, but only from his momentum, Dr Crane
mounts the pulpit and reads the lesson from a Bible spread on the
back of the brass eagle. I rejoice; my heart expands in his bulk,
in his authority. He lays the whirling dust clouds in my
tremulous, my ignominiously agitated mind--how we danced round the
Christmas tree and handing parcels they forgot me, and the fat
woman said, "This little boy has no present," and gave me a shiny
Union Jack from the top of the tree, and I cried with fury--to be
remembered with pity. Now all is laid by his authority, his
crucifix, and I feel come over me the sense of the earth under me,
and my roots going down and down till they wrap themselves round
some hardness at the centre. I recover my continuity, as he reads.
I become a figure in the procession, a spoke in the huge wheel that
turning, at last erects me, here and now. I have been in the dark;
I have been hidden; but when the wheel turns (as he reads) I rise
into this dim light where I just perceive, but scarcely, kneeling
boys, pillars and memorial brasses. There is no crudity here, no
sudden kisses.'
'The brute menaces my liberty,' said Neville, 'when he prays.
Unwarmed by imagination, his words fall cold on my head like
paving-stones, while the gilt cross heaves on his waistcoat. The
words of authority are corrupted by those who speak them. I gibe
and mock at this sad religion, at these tremulous, grief-stricken
figures advancing, cadaverous and wounded, down a white road
shadowed by fig trees where boys sprawl in the dust--naked boys;
and goatskins distended with wine hang at the tavern door. I was
in Rome travelling with my father at Easter; and the trembling
figure of Christ's mother was borne niddle-noddling along the
streets; there went by also the stricken figure of Christ in a
glass case.
'Now I will lean sideways as if to scratch my thigh. So I shall
see Percival. There he sits, upright among the smaller fry. He
breathes through his straight nose rather heavily. His blue and
oddly inexpressive eyes are fixed with pagan indifference upon the
pillar opposite. He would make an admirable churchwarden. He
should have a birch and beat little boys for misdemeanours. He is
allied with the Latin phrases on the memorial brasses. He sees
nothing; he hears nothing. He is remote from us all in a pagan
universe. But look--he flicks his hand to the back of his neck.
For such gestures one falls hopelessly in love for a lifetime.
Dalton, Jones, Edgar and Bateman flick their hands to the back of
their necks likewise. But they do not succeed.'
'At last,' said Bernard, 'the growl ceases. The sermon ends. He
has minced the dance of the white butterflies at the door to
powder. His rough and hairy voice is like an unshaven chin. Now
he lurches back to his seat like a drunken sailor. It is an action
that all the other masters will try to imitate; but, being flimsy,
being floppy, wearing grey trousers, they will only succeed in
making themselves ridiculous. I do not despise them. Their antics
seem pitiable in my eyes. I note the fact for future reference
with many others in my notebook. When I am grown up I shall carry
a notebook--a fat book with many pages, methodically lettered. I
shall enter my phrases. Under B shall come "Butterfly powder".
If, in my novel, I describe the sun on the window-sill, I shall
look under B and find butterfly powder. That will be useful. The
tree "shades the window with green fingers". That will be useful.
But alas! I am so soon distracted--by a hair like twisted candy,
by Celia's Prayer Book, ivory covered. Louis' can contemplate
nature, unwinking, by the hour. Soon I fail, unless talked to.
"The lake of my mind, unbroken by oars, heaves placidly and soon
sinks into an oily somnolence." That will be useful.'
'Now we move out of this cool temple, into the yellow playing-
fields,' said Louis. 'And, as it is a half-holiday (the Duke's
birthday) we will settle among the long grasses, while they play
cricket. Could I be "they" I would choose it; I would buckle on my
pads and stride across the playing-field at the head of the
batsmen. Look now, how everybody follows Percival. He is heavy.
He walks clumsily down the field, through the long grass, to where
the great elm trees stand. His magnificence is that of some
mediaeval commander. A wake of light seems to lie on the grass
behind him. Look at us trooping after him, his faithful servants,
to be shot like sheep, for he will certainly attempt some forlorn
enterprise and die in battle. My heart turns rough; it abrades my
side like a file with two edges: one, that I adore his magnificence;
the other I despise his slovenly accents--I who am so much his
superior--and am jealous.'
'And now,' said Neville, 'let Bernard begin. Let him burble on,
telling us stories, while we lie recumbent. Let him describe what
we have all seen so that it becomes a sequence. Bernard says there
is always a story. I am a story. Louis is a story. There is the
story of the boot-boy, the story of the man with one eye, the story
of the woman who sells winkles. Let him burble on with his story
while I lie back and regard the stiff-legged figures of the padded
batsmen through the trembling grasses. It seems as if the whole
world were flowing and curving--on the earth the trees, in the sky
the clouds. I look up, through the trees, into the sky. The match
seems to be played up there. Faintly among the soft, white clouds
I hear the cry "Run", I hear the cry "How's that?" The clouds lose
tufts of whiteness as the breeze dishevels them. If that blue
could stay for ever; if that hole could remain for ever; if this
moment could stay for ever--
'But Bernard goes on talking. Up they bubble--images. "Like a
camel," . . . "a vulture." The camel is a vulture; the vulture a
camel; for Bernard is a dangling wire, loose, but seductive. Yes,
for when he talks, when he makes his foolish comparisons, a
lightness comes over one. One floats, too, as if one were that
bubble; one is freed; I have escaped, one feels. Even the chubby
little boys (Dalton, Larpent and Baker) feel the same abandonment.
They like this better than the cricket. They catch the phrases as
they bubble. They let the feathery grasses tickle their noses.
And then we all feel Percival lying heavy among us. His curious
guffaw seems to sanction our laughter. But now he has rolled
himself over in the long grass. He is, I think, chewing a stalk
between his teeth. He feels bored; I too feel bored. Bernard at
once perceives that we are bored. I detect a certain effort, an
extravagance in his phrase, as if he said "Look!" but Percival says
"No." For he is always the first to detect insincerity; and is
brutal in the extreme. The sentence tails off feebly. Yes, the
appalling moment has come when Bernard's power fails him and there
is no longer any sequence and he sags and twiddles a bit of string
and falls silent, gaping as if about to burst into tears. Among
the tortures and devastations of life is this then--our friends are
not able to finish their stories.'
'Now let me try,' said Louis, 'before we rise, before we go to tea,
to fix the moment in one effort of supreme endeavour. This shall
endure. We are parting; some to tea; some to the nets; I to show
my essay to Mr Barker. This will endure. From discord, from
hatred (I despise dabblers in imagery--I resent the power of
Percival intensely) my shattered mind is pieced together by some
sudden perception. I take the trees, the clouds, to be witnesses
of my complete integration. I, Louis, I, who shall walk the earth
these seventy years, am born entire, out of hatred, out of discord.
Here on this ring of grass we have sat together, bound by the
tremendous power of some inner compulsion. The trees wave, the
clouds pass. The time approaches when these soliloquies shall be
shared. We shall not always give out a sound like a beaten gong as
one sensation strikes and then another. Children, our lives have
been gongs striking; clamour and boasting; cries of despair; blows
on the nape of the neck in gardens.
'Now grass and trees, the travelling air blowing empty spaces in
the blue which they then recover, shaking the leaves which then
replace themselves, and our ring here, sitting, with our arms
binding our knees, hint at some other order, and better, which
makes a reason everlastingly. This I see for a second, and shall
try tonight to fix in words, to forge in a ring of steel, though
Percival destroys it, as he blunders off, crushing the grasses,
with the small fry trotting subservient after him. Yet it is
Percival I need; for it is Percival who inspires poetry.'
'For how many months,' said Susan, 'for how many years, have I run
up these stairs, in the dismal days of winter, in the chilly days
of spring? Now it is midsummer. We go upstairs to change into
white frocks to play tennis--Jinny and I with Rhoda following
after. I count each step as I mount, counting each step something
done with. So each night I tear off the old day from the calendar,
and screw it tight into a ball. I do this vindictively, while
Betty and Clara are on their knees. I do not pray. I revenge
myself upon the day. I wreak my spite upon its image. You are
dead now, I say, school day, hated day. They have made all the
days of June--this is the twenty-fifth--shiny and orderly, with
gongs, with lessons, with orders to wash, to change, to work, to
eat. We listen to missionaries from China. We drive off in brakes
along the asphalt pavement, to attend concerts in halls. We are
shown galleries and pictures.
'At home the hay waves over the meadows. My father leans upon the
stile, smoking. In the house one door bangs and then another, as
the summer air puffs along the empty passages. Some old picture
perhaps swings on the wall. A petal drops from the rose in the
jar. The farm wagons strew the hedges with tufts of hay. All this
I see, I always see, as I pass the looking-glass on the landing,
with Jinny in front and Rhoda lagging behind. Jinny dances. Jinny
always dances in the hall on the ugly, the encaustic tiles; she
turns cartwheels in the playground; she picks some flower
forbiddenly, and sticks it behind her ear so that Miss Perry's dark
eyes smoulder with admiration, for Jinny, not me. Miss Perry loves
Jinny; and I could have loved her, but now love no one, except my
father, my doves and the squirrel whom I left in the cage at home
for the boy to look after.'
'I hate the small looking-glass on the stairs,' said Jinny. 'It
shows our heads only; it cuts off our heads. And my lips are too
wide, and my eyes are too close together; I show my gums too much
when I laugh. Susan's head, with its fell look, with its grass-
green eyes which poets will love, Bernard said, because they fall
upon close white stitching, put mine out; even Rhoda's face,
mooning, vacant, is completed, like those white petals she used to
swim in her bowl. So I skip up the stairs past them, to the next
landing, where the long glass hangs and I see myself entire. I see
my body and head in one now; for even in this serge frock they are
one, my body and my head. Look, when I move my head I ripple all
down my narrow body; even my thin legs ripple like a stalk in the
wind. I flicker between the set face of Susan and Rhoda's
vagueness; I leap like one of those flames that run between the
cracks of the earth; I move, I dance; I never cease to move and to
dance. I move like the leaf that moved in the hedge as a child and
frightened me. I dance over these streaked, these impersonal,
distempered walls with their yellow skirting as firelight dances
over teapots. I catch fire even from women's cold eyes. When I
read, a purple rim runs round the black edge of the textbook. Yet
I cannot follow any word through its changes. I cannot follow any
thought from present to past. I do not stand lost, like Susan,
with tears in my eyes remembering home; or lie, like Rhoda,
crumpled among the ferns, staining my pink cotton green, while I
dream of plants that flower under the sea, and rocks through which
the fish swim slowly. I do not dream.
'Now let us be quick. Now let me be the first to pull off these
coarse clothes. Here are my clean white stockings. Here are my
new shoes. I bind my hair with a white ribbon, so that when I leap
across the court the ribbon will stream out in a flash, yet curl
round my neck, perfectly in its place. Not a hair shall be
untidy.'
'That is my face,' said Rhoda, 'in the looking-glass behind Susan's
shoulder--that face is my face. But I will duck behind her to hide
it, for I am not here. I have no face. Other people have faces;
Susan and Jinny have faces; they are here. Their world is the real
world. The things they lift are heavy. They say Yes, they say No;
whereas I shift and change and am seen through in a second. If
they meet a housemaid she looks at them without laughing. But she
laughs at me. They know what to say if spoken to. They laugh
really; they get angry really; while I have to look first and do
what other people do when they have done it.
'See now with what extraordinary certainty Jinny pulls on her
stockings, simply to play tennis. That I admire. But I like
Susan's way better, for she is more resolute, and less ambitious of
distinction than Jinny. Both despise me for copying what they do;
but Susan sometimes teaches me, for instance, how to tie a bow,
while Jinny has her own knowledge but keeps it to herself. They
have friends to sit by. They have things to say privately in
corners. But I attach myself only to names and faces; and hoard
them like amulets against disaster. I choose out across the hall
some unknown face and can hardly drink my tea when she whose name I
do not know sits opposite. I choke. I am rocked from side to side
by the violence of my emotion. I imagine these nameless, these
immaculate people, watching me from behind bushes. I leap high to
excite their admiration. At night, in bed, I excite their complete
wonder. I often die pierced with arrows to win their tears. If
they should say, or I should see from a label on their boxes, that
they were in Scarborough last holidays, the whole town runs gold,
the whole pavement is illuminated. Therefore I hate looking-
glasses which show me my real face. Alone, I often fall down into
nothingness. I must push my foot stealthily lest I should fall off
the edge of the world into nothingness. I have to bang my head
against some hard door to call myself back to the body.'
'We are late,' said Susan. We must wait our turn to play. We will
pitch here in the long grass and pretend to watch Jinny and Clara,
Betty and Mavis. But we will not watch them. I hate watching
other people play games. I will make images of all the things I
hate most and bury them in the ground. This shiny pebble is Madame
Carlo, and I will bury her deep because of her fawning and
ingratiating manners, because of the sixpence she gave me for
keeping my knuckles flat when I played my scales. I buried her
sixpence. I would bury the whole school: the gymnasium; the
classroom; the dining-room that always smells of meat; and the
chapel. I would bury the red-brown tiles and the oily portraits of
old men--benefactors, founders of schools. There are some trees I
like; the cherry tree with lumps of clear gum on the bark; and one
view from the attic towards some far hills. Save for these, I
would bury it all as I bury these ugly stones that are always
scattered about this briny coast, with its piers and its trippers.
At home, the waves are mile long. On winter nights we hear them
booming. Last Christmas a man was drowned sitting alone in his
cart.'
'When Miss Lambert passes,' said Rhoda, 'talking to the clergyman,
the others laugh and imitate her hunch behind her back; yet