THREE
JEWS
By
LEONARD
WOOLF.
It was a Sunday and the first day
of spring, the first day on which one felt at any rate spring in the air. It
blew in at my window with its warm breath, with its inevitable little touch of
sadness. I felt restless, and I had nowhere to go to; everyone I knew was out
of town. I looked out of my window at the black trees breaking into bud, the
tulips and the hyacinths that even London could not rob of their reds and blues
and yellows, the delicate spring sunshine on the asphalt, and the pale blue sky
that the chimney pots broke into. I found myself muttering "damn it"
for no very obvious reason. It was spring, I suppose, the first stirring of the
blood.
I wanted to see clean trees, and
the sun shine upon grass; I wanted flowers and leaves unsoiled by soot; I
wanted to see and smell the earth; above all I wanted the horizon. I felt that
something was waiting for me beyond the houses and the chimney-pots: I should
find it where earth and sky meet. I didn't of course but I took the train to
Kew.
If I did not find in Kew the
place where earth and sky meet or even the smell of the earth, I saw at any
rate the sun upon the brown bark of trees and the delicate green of grass. It
was spring there, English spring with its fresh warm breath, and its pale blue
sky above the trees. Yes, the quiet orderly English spring that embraced and
sobered even the florid luxuriance of great flowers bursting in white cascades
over strange tropical trees.
And the spring had brought the
people out into the gardens, the quiet orderly English people. It was the first
stirring of the blood. It had stirred them to come out in couples, in family
parties, in tight matronly black dresses, in drab coats and trousers in dowdy
skirts and hats. It had stirred some to come in elegant costumes and morning
suits and spats. They looked at the flaunting tropical trees, and made jokes,
and chaffed one another, and laughed not very loud. They were happy in their
quiet orderly English way, happy in the warmth of the sunshine, happy to be
among quiet trees, and to feel the soft grass under their feet. They did not run
about or shout, they walked slowly, quietly, taking care to keep off the edges
of the grass because the notices told them to do so.
It was very warm, very pleasant,
and very tiring. I wandered cut at last through the big gates, and was waved by
a man with a napkin—he stood on the pavement—through a Georgian house into a
garden studded with white topped tables and dirty ricketty chairs. It was
crowded with people, and I sat down at the only vacant table, and watched them
eating plum-cake and drinking tea quietly, soberly, under the gentle
apple-blossom.
A man came up the garden looking
quickly from side to side for an empty place. I watched him in a tired lazy
way. There was a bustle and roll and energy in his walk. I noticed the
thickness of his legs above the knee, the arms that hung so loosely and limply
by his sides as they do with people who wear loose hanging clothes without
sleeves, his dark fat face and the sensual mouth, the great curve of the upper
lip and the hanging lower one. A clever face, dark and inscrutable, with its
large mysterious eyes and the heavy lids which went into deep folds at the
corners.
He stopped near my table, looked
at the empty chair and then at me, and said:
"Excuse me, Sir, but d'you
mind my sitting at your table?"
I noticed the slight thickness of
the voice, the overemphasis, and the little note of assertiveness in it. I said
I didn't mind at all.
He sat down, leaned back in his
chair, and took his hat off. He had a high forehead, black hair, and
well-shaped fat hands.
"Fine day," he said,
"wonderfully fine day, the finest day I ever remember. Nothing to beat a
fine English spring day."
I saw the delicate apple-blossom
and the pale blue sky behind his large dark head. I smiled. He saw the smile,
flushed, and then smiled himself.
"You are amused," he
said, still smiling, "I believe I know why."
"Yes," I said,
"You knew me at once and I knew you. We show up, don't we, under the
apple-blossom and this sky. It doesn't belong to us, do you wish it did?"
"Ah," he said
seriously, "that's the question. Or rather we don't belong to it. We
belong to Palestine still, but I'm not sure that it doesn't belong to us for
all that."
"Well, perhaps your version
is truer than mine. I'll take it, but there's still the question, do you wish
you belonged to it?"
He wasn't a bit offended. He
tilted back his chair, put one thumb in the arm-hole of his waistcoat, and
looked round the garden. He showed abominably concentrated, floridly
intelligent, in the thin spring air and among the inconspicuous tea-drinkers.
He didn't answer my question; he was thinking, and when he spoke, he asked
another:
"Do you ever go to
Synagogue?"
"No."
"Nor do I, except on Yom
Kippur. I still go then every year—pure habit. I don't believe in it, of course;
I believe in nothing—you believe in nothing—we're all sceptics. And yet we
belong to Palestine still. Funny, ain't it? How it comes out! Under the
apple-blossom and blue sky, as you say, as well as—as—among the tombs."
"Among the tombs?"
"Ah, I was thinking of
another man I met. He belongs to Palestine too. Shall I tell you about
him?"
I said I wished he would. He put
his hand's in his pockets and began at once.
* * * * *
* * * *
The first time I saw him, I
remember the day well, as well as yesterday. There was no apple-blossom then, a
November day, cold, bitter cold, the coldest day I remember. It was the
anniversary of my poor wife's death. She was my first wife, Rebecca. She made
me a good wife, I tell you—we were very happy. (He took out a white silk pocket
handkerchief, opened it with something of a flourish, and blew his nose long
and loudly. Then he continued.)
I buried her at the cemetery in
K—Road. You know it? What? No? You must know it, the big cemetery near the
hospital. You know the hospital at any rate? Well, you turn down by it coming
from the station, take the first turning to the right and the second to the
left, and there you are. It's a big cemetery, very big, almost as big as
Golders Green, and they keep the gardens very nicely. Well, my poor wife lies
there—my first wife, I've married again, you see, and she's living and well,
thank God—and I went on the first anniversary to visit the grave and put
flowers on it.
There you are now, there's
another curious thing. I often wonder why we do it. It's not as if it did
anyone any good. I don't believe in immortality, nor do you, nor do any of us.
But I go and put flowers on her grave though it won't do her any good, poor
soul. It's sentiment, I suppose. No one can say we Jews haven't got that, and
family affection. They're among our very strongest characteristics.
Yes, they don't like us. (He
looked round at the quiet tea-drinkers.) We're too clever perhaps, too sharp,
too go-ahead. Nous, that's what we've got, Nous, and they don't like it, eh?
But they can't deny us our other virtues—sentiment and family affection. Now
look at the Titanic disaster: who was it refused to get into the boats, unless
her husband went too? Who met death hand in hand with him? Eh? A Jewess! There
you are! Her children rise up and call her blessed: her husband also and he
praiseth her!
I put that verse from Proverbs on
my poor wife's tombstone. I remember standing in front of it, and reading it
over and over again that day, the day I'm talking about. My dear Sir, I felt
utterly wretched, standing there in that cold wet cemetery, with all those
white tombstones round me and a damp yellow November fog. I put some beautiful
white flowers on her grave.
The cemetery-keeper had given me
some glass gallipots to stand the flowers in, and, as I left, I thought I would
give him a shilling. He was standing near the gates. By Jove! You couldn't
mistake him for anything but a Jew. His arms hung down from his shoulders in
that curious, loose, limp way—you know it?—it makes the clothes look as if they
didn't belong to the man who is wearing them. Clever cunning grey eyes, gold
pince-nez, and a nose, by Jove, Sir, one of the best, one of those noses, white
and shiny, which, when you look at it full face, seems almost flat on the face,
but immensely broad, curving down, like a broad highroad from between the bushy
eye-brows down over the lips. And side face, it was colossal; it stood out like
an elephant's trunk with its florid curves and scrolls.
I was, as I say, utterly
wretched. I wanted someone to talk to, and though I didn't expect to get much
comfort out of a cemetery-keeper, I said by way of conversation, as I gave him
a shilling:
"You keep these gardens very
nicely."
He looked at me over the gold
rims of his glasses:
"We do our best. I haven't
been here long, you know, but I do my best. And a man can't do more, now can
he?"
"No" I said, "he
can't."
He put his head on one side, and
looked at a tombstone near by: it was tilted over to one side, blackened by the
soot to a dirty yellow colour, the plaster peeling off. There was one dirty
scraggy evergreen growing on the grave. There was a text on the stone, I
remember, something about the righteous nourishing like the bay-tree.
"Of course one can't do
everything. Look at that now. Some people don't do anything, never come near
the place, don't spend a penny on their graves. Then of course they go like
that. It will get worse and worse, for we only bury reserves here now.
Sometimes it ain't anyone's fault: families die out, the graves are forgotten.
It don't look nice, but well, I say, what does it matter after all? When I'm
dead, they may chuck me on the dung-hill, for all I care."
He looked down his nose at the
rows and rows of dirty white grave-stones, which were under his charge, critically,
with an air of hostility, as if they had done him some wrong.
"You don't perhaps believe
in a life after death?" I said.
He pushed his hands well down
into the pockets of his long overcoat, hugged himself together, and looked up
at the yellow sky and dirty yellow houses, looming over the cemetery.
"No I don't," he said
with conviction. "It ain't likely. Nobody knows anything about it. It
ain't likely, is it?"
"No, but what about the
Bible?"
His cold grey eyes looked at me
steadily over the gold pince-nez.
"I'm not sure there's much
in the Bible about it, eh? And one can't believe everything in the Bible.
There's the Almighty of course, well, who can say? He may exist, he may not—I
say I don't know. But a life hereafter, I don't believe in it. One don't have
to believe everything now: it was different when I was young. You had to
believe everything then; you had to believe everything they told you in Schul.
Now you may think for yourself. And mind you, it don't do to think too much: if
you think too much about those things, you go mad, raving mad. What I say is,
lead a pure clean life here, and you'll get your reward here. I've seen it in
my own case: I wasn't always in a job like this. I had a business once, things
went wrong through no fault of mine, and I lost everything—everything sold up
except an old wooden bed. Ah, those were hard times, I can tell you! Then I got
offered this job—it ain't very good, but I thought to myself: well, there'll be
a comfortable home for my wife and my two boys as long as I live. I've tried to
live a clean life, and I shall have better times now, eh?
I thought of my own wife and my
motherless children: my sadness increased. And I thought of our race, its
traditions and its faith, how they are vanishing in the life that surrounds us.
The old spirit, the old faith, they had kept alive hot and vigorous—for how
many centuries?—when we were spat upon, outcasts. But now they are cold and
feeble, vanishing in the universal disbelief. I looked at the man under the
shadow of the dirty yellow London fog and the squalid yellow London houses.
"This man," I thought to myself, "a mere keeper of graves is
touched by it as much as I am. He isn't a Jew now any more than I am. We're
Jews only externally now, in our black hair and our large noses, in the way we
stand and the way we walk. But inside we're Jews no longer. Even he doesn't
believe, the keeper of Jewish graves! The old spirit, the ancient faith has
gone out of him."
I was wrong; I know now, and I'll
tell you how I came to see it. The spirit's still there all right; it comes out
under the apple-blossom, eh?, and it came out among the tombs too.
The next time I saw him was
another November day, an English, a London day; O Lord, his nose showed in it
very white and florid under the straight houses and the chimney-pots and the
heavy, melancholy dripping sky. I had married in the meantime, and my wife—like
the good soul that she is—had come with me to put flowers on my poor Rebecca's
grave—another anniversary you see. Yes, I was happy—I don't mind telling you
so—even at my poor Rebecca's graveside.
He was standing there in the same
place, in a black top-hat and a great black overcoat, looking at the tombstones
over the top of his gold-rimmed glasses. All the cares of the world seemed to
be weighing down his sloping shoulders.
"Good day", he said to
me, just touching the brim of his hat.
"Well", I said,
"and how's the world going with you?"
He fixed me with his hard grey
eyes that had a look of pain in them, and said in a tone which had neither reverence
nor irony in it, nor indeed any feeling at all:
"The Lord gave and the Lord
hath taken away, blessed be the name of the Lord. I buried my poor wife last
Thursday".
There was an awkward silence.
"I'm very sorry to hear
that," I said, "very sorry."
"Yes" he said,
"The righteous flourish like the bay-tree: they tell us that: you see it
there on the tombstone."
He put his head on one side and
stared at it.
"Vell," he said—and I
noticed for the first time the thick Jewish speech—"vell, its there, so I
suppose its true, ain't it? But its difficult to see, y' know always. I've
often said the only thing we can do is to lead a clean life here, a pure life,
and we'll get our reward. But mine seems to be pretty long in coming," he
sighed, "yes pretty long, I tell you. I had hard times before: we both of
us did, my poor wife and I. And then at last I got this job; I thought she was
going to have a happy peaceful life at last. Nothing very grand in pay, but
enough to keep us and the two boys. And a nice enough house for her. And then
as soon as we come here she takes ill and dies, poor soul."
He wiped his eyes.
"I don't know why I should
call her poor soul. She's at rest any way. And she made me the best, the very
best wife a man could have."
He put his hands well down in the
pockets of his overcoat, drew his arms to his sides so that he looked like a
great black bird folding its wings round itself, and rocked himself backwards
and forwards, first on his toes and then on his heels, looking up at me
sideways with wrinkled forehead.
"Vell," he said,
"EI've got my two boys. I wish you could see 'em. Fine young fellows. One
earning 30/- a week, though he's only eighteen. He'll do well, I tell you; all
right up here." He tapped his forehead. "And the other, though I'm
his father I'm not afraid to tell anyone, he's a genius—he draws, draws
beautiful, and paints too, real artistic pictures. Ah they're good lads—a bit
wild, the elder one—" he lowered his voice and showed his teeth in a grin,
"he's got an eye for the petticoats, but then boys will be boys. I daresay
I was the same myself."
I didn't altogether like the
grin, with my wife standing there, so I gave him a shilling and went. I've seen
him once more: the day came round again, and I took my boy this time, dear
little chap, to see his mother's grave. And Fanny came too,—ah, she's a mother
to those motherless children.
There he was standing in the same
place, in his top-hat and seedy black coat. I saw at once that things were not
right with him. His clothes seemed to hang on him as if he were merely an old
clothes prop; his old bowed shoulders sloped more than ever. His face was grey,
pasty, terribly lined, and his nose more white and shiny than ever. Seedy was
the word for him, seedy inside and out, seedy through and through. He was
beaten, degraded, down, gone under, gone all to bits. And yet somehow he looked
as if that was just what hadn't happened—he hadn't gone all to bits: there was
something in him that still stood up and held him together, something like a
rock which, beaten and buffeted, still held out indomitable.
"Well, and how are
you?" I asked.
"Poorly," he said in a
flat voice, "poorly—I'm not what I was."
"Nothing serious, I
hope?"
"Vell, I'm not on my back
yet."
"And the boys? They're still
doing well, I hope."
A sort of rigidity came over him:
he eyed me furtively and yet sternly.
"Boys? I've only one
boy."
"Ah, I'm sorry, very sorry
to—"
"No, no, it's not what you
think, not that. I've had trouble, but not that. That eldest boy of mine, he's
no longer my son——I have done with him; I have only one son now."
There was nothing dejected,
nothing humble in him now. He seemed to draw himself together, to become
taller. A stiff-necked race, I thought!
"If you ask me how many sons
I've got, I say only one, only one. That fellow isn't my son at all. I had a
servant girl here working in my house, a Christian serving girl—and he married
her behind my back. He asks me to sit down to meat with a girl, a Christian
girl, who worked in my house—I can't do it. I'm not proud, but there are some
things—If he had come to me and said: "Dad, I want to marry a girl"—a
really nice girl—"but she's not one of us: will you give me your
permission and blessing?" Well I don't believe in it. Our women are as
good, better than Christian women. Aren't they as beautiful, as clever, as good
wives? I know my poor mother, God rest her soul, used to say: "My
son," she said, "if you come to me and say you want to marry a good
girl, a Jewess, I don't care whether she hasn't a chemise to her back, I'll
welcome her—but if you marry a Christian, if she's as rich as Solomon, I've
done with you—don't you ever dare to come into my house again." Vell, I
don't go as far as that, though I understand it. Times change: I might have
received his wife, even though she was a Goy. But a servant girl who washed my
dishes! I couldn't do it. One must have some dignity."
He stood there upright, stern,
noble: a battered scarred old rock, but immovable under his seedy black coat. I
couldn't offer him a shilling; I shook his hand, and left him brooding over his
son and his graves.
THE MARK
ON THE WALL
By
VIRGINIA
WOOLF
Perhaps it was the middle of
January in the present year that I first looked up and saw the mark on the
wall. In order to fix a date it is necessary to remember what one saw. So now I
think of the fire; the steady film of yellow light upon the page of my book;
the three chrysanthemums in the round glass bowl on the mantelpiece. Yes, it
must have been the winter time, and we had just finished our tea, for I remember
that I was smoking a cigarette when I looked up and saw the mark on the wall
for the first time. I looked up through the smoke of my cigarette and my eye
lodged for a moment upon the burning coals, and that old fancy of the crimson
flag flapping from the castle tower came into my mind, and I thought of the
cavalcade of red knights riding up the side of the black rock. Rather to my
relief the sight of the mark interrupted the fancy, for it is an old fancy, an
automatic fancy, made as a child perhaps. The mark was a small round mark,
black upon the white wall, about six or seven inches above the mantelpiece.
How readily our thoughts swarm
upon a new object, lifting it a little way, as ants carry a blade of straw so
feverishly, and then leave it . . . . . . If that mark was made by a nail, it
can't have been for a picture, it must have been for a miniature—the miniature
of a lady with white powdered curls, powder-dusted cheeks, and lips like red
carnations. A fraud of course, for the people who had this house before us
would have chosen pictures in that way—an old picture for an old room. That is
the sort of people they were—very interesting people, and I think of them so
often, in such queer places, because one will never see them again, never know
what happened next. She wore a flannel dog collar round her throat, and he drew
posters for an oatmeal company, and they wanted to leave this house because
they wanted to change their style of furniture, so he said, and he was in
process of saying that in his opinion art should have ideas behind it when we
were torn asunder, as one is torn from the old lady about to pour out tea and
the young man about to hit the tennis ball in the back garden of the suburban
villa as one rushes past in the train.
But as for that mark, I'm not
sure about it; I don't believe it was made by a nail after all; its too big,
too round for that. I might get up, but if I got up and looked at it, ten to
one I shouldn't be able to say for certain; because once a thing's done, no one
ever knows how it happened. O dear me, the mystery of life! The inaccuracy of
thought! The ignorance of humanity! To show how very little control of our
possessions we have—what an accidental affair this living is after all our
civilisation—let me just count over a few of the things lost in one lifetime,
beginning, for that seems always the most mysterious of all loses—what cat
would gnaw, what rat would nibble—three pale blue canisters of book-binding
tools? Then there were the bird cages, the iron hoops, the steel skates, the
Queen Anne coal-scuttle, the bagatelle board, the hand organ—all gone, and
jewels too. Opals and emeralds, they lie about the root of turnips. What a
scraping paring affair it is to be sure! The wonder is that I've any clothes on
my back, that I sit surrounded by solid furniture at this moment. Why, if one
wants to compare life to anything, one must liken it to being blown through the
Tube at fifty miles an hour—landing at the other end without a single hair pin
in one's hair! Shot out at the feet of God entirely naked! Tumbling head over
heels in the asphodel meadows like brown paper parcels pitched down a shoot in
the post office! With one's hair flying back like the tail of a race horse.
Yes, that seems to express the rapidity of life, the perpetual waste and
repair; all so casual, all so haphazard. . . .
But after life. The slow pulling
down of thick green stalks so that the cup of the flower as it turns over
deluges one with purple and red light. Why, after all, should one not be born
there as one is born here, helpless, speechless, unable to focus one's
eyesight, groping at the roots of the grass, at the toes of the Giants? As for
saying which are trees, and which are men and women, or whether there are such
things, that one won't be in a condition to do for fifty years or so. There
will be nothing but spaces of light and dark, intersected by thick stalks, and
rather higher up perhaps, rose-shaped blots of an indistinct colour—dim pinks
and blues—which will, as time goes on, become more definite, become—I don't
know what.
And yet that mark on the wall is
not a hole at all. It may even be caused by some round black substance, such as
a small rose leaf, left over from the summer, and I, not being a very vigilant
house-keeper—look at the dust on the mantelpiece, for example, the dust which,
so they say, buried Troy three times over, only fragments of pots utterly
refusing annihilation, as one can believe. But I know a house-keeper, a woman
with the profile of a policeman, those little round buttons marked even upon
the edge of her shadow, a woman with a broom in her hand, a thumb on picture
frames, an eye under beds and she talks always of art. She is coming nearer and
nearer; and now, pointing to certain spots of yellow rust on the fender, she becomes
so menacing that to oust her, I shall have to end her by taking action: I shall
have to get up and see for myself what that mark—
But no. I refuse to be beaten. I
will not move. I will not recognise her. See, she fades already. I am very
nearly rid of her and her insinuations, which I can hear quite distinctly. Yet
she has about her the pathos of all people who wish to compromise. And why
should I resent the fact that she has a few books in her house, a picture or
two? But what I really resent is that she resents me—life being an affair of
attack and defence after all. Another time I will have it out with her, not
now. She must go now. The tree outside the window taps very gently on the pane.
I want to think quietly, calmly, spaciously, never to be interrupted, never to
have to rise from my chair, to slip easily from one thing to another, without
any sense of hostility, or obstacle. I want to sink deeper and deeper, away
from the surface, with its hard separate facts. To steady myself, let me catch
hold of the first idea that passes. Shakespeare. Well, he will do as well as
another. A man who sat himself solidly in an arm-chair, and looked into the
fire, so—A shower of ideas fell perpetually from some very high Heaven down
through his mind. He leant his forehead on his hand, and people looking in
through the open door, for this scene is supposed to take place on a summer's
evening,—But how dull this is, this historical fiction! It doesn't interest me
at all. I wish I could hit upon a pleasant track of thought, a track indirectly
reflecting credit upon myself, for those are the pleasantest thoughts, and very
frequent even in the minds of modest mouse-coloured people, who believe
genuinely that they dislike to hear their own praises. They are not thoughts directly
praising oneself; that is the beauty of them; they are thoughts like this.
"And then I came into the
room. They were discussing botany. I said how I'd seen a flower growing on a
dust heap on the site of an old house in Kingsway. The seed, I said, must have
been sown in the reign of Charles the First. What flowers grew in the reign of
Charles the First? I asked—(but I don't remember the answer). Tall flowers with
purple tassels to them perhaps. And so it goes on. All the time I'm dressing up
the figure of myself in my own mind lovingly, stealthily, not openly adoring
it, for if I did that, I should catch myself out, and stretch my hand at once
for a book in self protection. Indeed, it is curious how instinctively one
protects the image of oneself from idolatry or any other handling that could
make it ridiculous, or too unlike the original to be believed in any longer. Or
is it not so very curious after all? It is a matter of great importance.
Suppose the looking glass smashes, the image disappears, and the romantic
figure with the green of forest depths all about it is there no longer, but
only that shell of a person which is seen by other people—what an airless
shallow, bald, prominent world it becomes! A world not to be lived in. As we
face each other in omnibuses and underground railways we are looking into the
mirror; that accounts for the expression in our vague and almost glassy eyes.
And the novelists in future will realise more and more the importance of these
reflections, for of course there is not one reflection but an almost infinite
number; those are the depths they will explore, those the phantoms they will
pursue, leaving the description of reality more and more out of their stories,
taking a knowledge of it for granted, as the Greeks did and Shakespeare
perhaps; but these generalisations are very worthless. The military sound of
the word is enough. It recalls leading articles, cabinet ministers—a whole
class of things indeed which as a child one thought the thing itself, the
standard thing, the real thing, from which one could not depart save at the
risk of nameless damnation. Generalisations bring back somehow Sunday in
London, Sunday afternoon walks, Sunday luncheons, and also ways of speaking of
the dead, clothes and habits—like the habit of sitting all together in one room
until a certain hour, although nobody liked it. There was a rule for
everything. The rule for tablecloths at that particular period was that they
should be made of tapestry with little yellow compartments marked upon them,
such as you may see in photographs of the carpets in the corridors of the royal
palaces. Tablecloths of a different kind were not real tablecloths. How
shocking and yet how wonderful it was to discover that these real things,
Sunday luncheons, Sunday walks, country houses, and tablecloths were not
entirely real, were indeed half phantoms, and the damnation which visited the
disbeliever in them was only a sense of illegitimate freedom. What now takes
the place of those things, I wonder, those real standard things? Men perhaps,
should you be a woman; the masculine point of view which governs our lives,
which sets the standard, which establishes Whitaker's Table of Precedency,
which has become, I suppose, since the war half a phantom to many men and
women, which soon one may hope will be laughed into the dustbin where the
phantoms go, the mahogany sideboards and Landseer prints, Gods and Devils, Hell
and so forth, leaving us all with an intoxicating sense of illegitimate
freedom—if freedom exists.
In certain lights, that mark on
the wall seems actually to project from the wall. Nor is it entirely circular.
I cannot be sure, but it seems to cast a perceptible shadow, suggesting that if
I ran my finger down that strip of the wall it would at a certain point mount
and descend a small tumulus, a smooth tumulus like those barrows on the South
Downs which are, they say, either tombs or camps. Of the two I should prefer
them to be tombs, desiring melancholy like most English people and finding it
natural at the end of a walk to think of the bones stretched beneath the turf.
There must be some book about it. Some antiquary must have dug up those bones
and given them a name. What sort of man is an antiquary, I wonder? Retired
colonels for the most part, I daresay, leading parties of aged labourers to the
top here, examining clods of earth and stone, and getting into correspondence
with the neighbouring clergy, which being opened at breakfast time gives them a
feeling of importance, and the comparison of arrowheads necessitates cross
country journeys to the county towns, an agreeable necessity both to them and
to their elderly wives, who wish to make plum jam, or to clean out the study,
and have every reason for keeping that great question of the camp or the tomb
in perpetual suspension, while the Colonel himself feels agreeably philosophic
in accumulating evidence on both sides of the question. It is true that he does
finally incline to believe in the camp; and, being opposed, casts all his
arrowheads into one scale, and being still further opposed, indites a pamphlet
which he is about to read at the quarterly meeting of the local society when a
stroke lays him low, and his last conscious thoughts are not of wire or child,
but of the camp and that arrow-head there which is now in the case at the local
museum, together with the hand of a Chinese murderess, a handful of Elizabethan
nails, a great many Tudor clay pipes a piece of Roman pottery, and the
wine-glass that Nelson drank out of—proving I really don't know what.
No, no, nothing is proved,
nothing is known. And if I were to get up at this very moment and ascertain
that the mark on the wall is really—what shall we say?—the head of a gigantic
old nail, driven in two hundred years ago which has now, owing to the patient
attrition of many generations of housemaids, revealed its head above the coat
of paint, and is taking its first view of modern life in the sight of a
white-walled fire-lit room, what should I gain? Knowledge? Matter for further
speculation? I can think sitting still as well as standing up. And what is
knowledge? What are our learned men save the descendants of witches and hermits
who crouched in caves and in woods brewing herbs, interrogating shrew-mice, and
writing down the language of the stars? And the less we honour them as our
superstitions dwindle and our respect for beauty and health of mind increases.
. . . . Yes, one could imagine a very pleasant world. A quiet spacious world,
with the flowers so red and blue in the open fields. A world without professors
or specialists or house-keepers with the profiles of policemen, a world which
one could slice with ones thought as a fish slices the water with his fin,
grazing the stems of the water-lilies, and hanging suspended over nests of
white sea eggs. . . . . . How peaceful it is down here, rooted into the centre
of the world and gazing up through the gray waters, with their sudden gleams of
light, and their reflections—If it were not for Whitakers Almanack—if it were
not for the Table of Precedency!
I must jump up and see for myself
what that mark on the wall really is—a nail, a rose-leaf, a crack in the wood?
Here is Nature once more at her
old game of self-preservation. This train of thought, she perceives, is
threatening mere waste of energy, even some collision with reality, for who
will ever be able to lift a finger against Whitaker's Table of Precedency? The
Archbishop of Canterbury is followed by the Lord High Chancellor; the Lord High
Chancellor is followed by the Archbishop of York. Everybody follows somebody,
such is the philosophy of Whitaker; and the great thing is to know who follows
whom. Whitaker knows, and let that, so Nature counsels, comfort you, instead of
enraging you; and if you can't be comforted, if you must shatter this hour of
peace, think of the mark on the wall.
I understand Nature's game—her
prompting to take action as a way of ending any thought that threatens to
excite or to pain. Hence, I suppose, comes our slight contempt for men of
action, men, we assume, who don't think. Still, there's no harm in putting a
full stop to one's disagreeable thoughts by looking at a mark on the wall.
Indeed, now that I have fixed my
eyes upon it, I feel I have grasped a plank in the sea; I feel a satisfying
sense of reality which at once turns the two Archbishops and the Lord High
Chancellor to the shadows of shades. Here is something definite, something
real. Thus, waking from a midnight dream of horror one hastily turns on the
light and lies quiescent, worshipping the chest of drawers, worshipping solidity,
worshipping reality, worshipping the impersonal world which is a proof of some
existence other than ours. That is what one wants to be sure of.... Wood is a
pleasant thing to think about. It comes from a tree; and trees grow and we
don't know how they grow. For years and years they grow without paying any
attention to us, in meadows, in forests and by the side of rivers—all things
one likes to think about. The cows swish their tails beneath them on hot
afternoons; they paint rivers so green that when a moor-hen dives one expects
to see its feathers all green when it comes up again. I like to think of the
fish balanced against the stream like flags blown out; and of water-beetles
slowly raising domes of mud upon the bed of the river. I like to think of the
tree itself; first the close dry sensation of being wood; then there is the
grinding of the storm; then the slow, delicious ooze of sap. I like to think of
it too on winter's nights standing in the empty field with all leaves
close-furled, nothing tender exposed to the iron bullets of the moon, a naked
mast upon an earth that goes tumbling, tumbling, all night long. The song of
birds must sound very loud and strange in June; and how cold the feet of
insects must feel upon it, as they make laborious progresses up the creases of
the bark, or sun themselves upon the thin green awning of the leaves, and look
straight in front of them with huge diamond-cut red eyes. One by one the fibres
snap beneath the immense cold pressure of the earth; then the last storm comes
and, falling, the highest branches drive deep into the ground again. Even so,
life isn't done with; there are a million patient, watchful lives still for a
tree, all over the world, in bed-rooms, in ships, on the pavement, lining rooms
where men and women sit after tea smoking their cigarettes. It is full of
peaceful thoughts, happy thoughts, this tree. I should like to take each one
separately—but something is getting in the way ... Where was I? What has it all
been about? A tree? A river? The Downs, Whitaker's Almanack, the fields of
asphodel? I can't remember a thing. Everything's moving, falling, slipping,
vanishing... There is a vast upheaval of matter. Someone is standing over me
and saying—
"I'm going out to buy a
newspaper."
"Yes?"
"Though it's no good, buying
newspapers....... Nothing ever happens. Curse this war! God damn this war!...
All the same, I don't see why we should have a snail on our wall."
Ah, the mark on the wall! For it
was a snail.
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