Read Parents and Children Online
Authors: Ivy Compton-Burnett
âHe was quite sure it could not do that. And I should hardly dare to listen. And I don't suppose it would.'
âWe ought to imagine things about ourselves.'
âIf they were true, Sir Jesse would not have had to bring us up,' said Lester.
âHe never seems proud of what he has done,' said Priscilla. âHe almost draws a veil over it.'
âOver us, I think it is,' said Susan. âHe does not require us to go to church, because he would have to recognize us.'
âIt would be a great waste of our Sunday,' said Lester, in a startled tone.
âI wonder if we are as odd as we think we are,' said Susan.
âWe can only hope so,' said her sister, âand continue to do our best.'
âThere is Daniel's voice,' said Susan. âAnd I expect Graham is with him.'
âThat would not mean a voice,' said Lester, in a tone of stating a fact.
âYou do not mind my bringing Graham,' said Daniel. âI find it best to keep him under my eye.'
Graham took a seat.
âHas your father gone yet?' said Susan.
âNo, or I should be at home, taking his place,' said Daniel.
âI wish I had just enough money to live on,' said Graham, looking round the room.
âWhy do people wish that?' said Priscilla. âWhy not wish to have enough and to spare?'
âThey mean they do not ask much,' said Graham. âBut of course they are asking everything.'
âA thing is more desirable when it is unattainable,' said Daniel.
âAnd how reasonable that is,' said Priscilla, âwhen nothing comes up to expectation!'
âThis would,' said Graham, âto anyone brought up as an obligation.'
âWe have been brought up like that too,' said Susan, âbut it has sat on us more lightly.'
âSir Jesse seems to have formed the habit,' said Priscilla. âAnd it is a very useful one.'
âI wish you could sometimes come to the house,' said Graham.
âSir Jesse is ashamed of us,' said Susan. âWe never quite know why.'
âWe will not pretend to see any reason,' said Priscilla.
âI wonder if we shall ever know,' said Lester.
âGrandma is the person to ask you,' said Daniel, âand she never welcomes outsiders.'
âThen how do your friends get to the house?' said Susan.
âThey do not,' said Graham. âWe have no friends.'
âThe iron has entered into the boy's soul,' said Daniel.
âGraham and Lester both have a squeak in their voices,' said Susan.
âLester must unconsciously try to catch a note from a different and more spacious world,' said her sister.
âI have very simple tastes,' said Graham.
âYou have had little chance of acquiring others,' said Daniel.
âThat is said to give people expensive ones,' said Priscilla.
âHas it in your case?' said Graham.
âNo, but we are unusual. It is no good to say we are not.'
âIs that why Hope is uneasy about knowing us?' said Lester.
âIt is only because we are not known,' said Priscilla. âIt is nothing personal.'
âThere is something second-rate going through Hope,' said Susan. âShe thinks she makes it better by joking about it.'
âAnd so she does,' said her sister. âShe makes it very good indeed. You don't mean you do not like it?'
âI wish the next six months were over,' said Graham.
âI do not,' said Lester. âIt would mean that all three of us had six months less to live.'
âIt would mean it for us too,' said Daniel, âand for everyone.'
âI suppose it would,' said Lester, after a moment's thought.
âOh, let me introduce Mother,' said Priscilla, taking up the photograph. âMy long struggle to take her place is over. She is here to fill it herself. I almost feel jealous of her, but I suppose
that is usual with eldest daughters. Sir Jesse came this afternoon and filled the blank in our lives.'
âGrandpa did not say he was coming,' said Graham.
âIs it the first time you have not had his confidence?' said Daniel.
âI am so grateful to Mother for my existence,' said Priscilla. âI believe that is very unusual, but I enjoy existence very much. I do agree that life is sweet.'
âYou are more like your mother than you are like each other,' said Graham.
âShe must be in all of us,' said Lester.
âSo she has really been here all the time,' said Priscilla. âThat makes me feel rather foolish.'
âWho will miss your father the most?' said Susan.
âGrandma,' said Graham, âand then I suppose Mother, and then one or two of the girls. But no one will like the house without him. He seems to lift some blight that hangs over us.'
âI hardly know him,' said Lester.
âYou must feel you are beginning to do so,' said Priscilla. âAnd you must find it a privilege?'
âWe shall have to settle down,' said Daniel. âWe can't remain in a state of tension for six months.'
âIt does sound dreadful,' said Priscilla, looking at Graham's face. âTo settle down for six months, when youth is such a sad time. Not that I did not find it very pleasant. I always wonder why people cling to it, when they find it so uncongenial. I get to like it more and more. You see I still think I have it.'
âI could like it,' said Graham, again looking round the room.
âBooks and a fire,' said Priscilla. âYou can have nothing more. I am not one of those people who belittle the things they have. I daresay you think I do the opposite.'
âPeople pity us,' said Lester to Graham, in a tone of information.
âBecause we have the bare necessities of life,' said Priscilla. âAnd that is foolish, when necessities are so important. They would hardly pity us any more for not having them.'
âThey pity you and not me,' said Graham, in an incredulous tone.
âWell, you live in Sir Jesse's house, and we live here,' said Susan.
âI have a seat at the table and a room on an upper floor.'
âAnd what do you do at the table, Graham?' said Daniel.
âYou cannot have pity as well,' said Priscilla. âAnd it would not be much good to you.'
âWe know about it, though we do not mind it,' said Lester.
âYou know nothing of self-pity,' said Graham. âAnd that is the only sort that counts.'
âDoes no one want to say good-bye to Father?' said Eleanor, in a high, incredulous voice from the hall, with her face held towards the upper landings. âDo you not want to see the last of him? Or have you all forgotten he is going?'
âOur minds may be so weary of the image that they have yielded it up,' said Isabel, as her feet kept pace with her sister's on the stairs.
âAre you just going on with your life in your ordinary way?' said Eleanor, in the same tone and with her brows raised. âIs this day just the same as any other to you?'
âIt is an odd person who can suggest that,' said her daughter. âWe thought you might want to say good-bye to Father by yourself, that that was perhaps why he came to see us last night.'
âOh, that is what it was. But I do not want to keep him to myself at this last stage. He will want to remember us all together,' said Eleanor, with her querulous honesty. âI am not the only person he has in his life. Run up and see that everyone is here. He will be going in half-an-hour.'
Isabel mounted a flight of stairs and raised her voice in a message to Hatton.
âFrom the way Isabel moves, you would think your father had a month to be here,' said Eleanor.
âHe has almost,' said Isabel, in a low voice to Venice, as she returned. âThirty minutes, and we have had one!'
âShall I go and fetch Luce and Daniel and Graham?' said James, hovering near his mother.
âYes, tell them all to come. I cannot understand this lackadaisical attitude. You might not have a father. I simply do not feel I can explain it.'
Eleanor was released from this effort by the appearance of her sons and daughter from their study, with Luce holding her father's arm, and her brothers wearing the look of the final advice and farewell. Sir Jesse and Regan came from the library, the former resolute and almost urbane, the latter ravaged and fierce. Hatton appeared on the landing with the children, put Nevill's hand into Honor's, and withdrew round the balusters to await events.
âSo we are here to get all we can out of it,' said Regan. âIt shows it is not too much for us; that is one thing.'
âIt ensures that it shall be,' said Graham.
âTrouble shared is trouble halved,' said Fulbert, in a cheerful tone. âIt will be disappearing amongst a dozen, and I shall leave dry eyes behind.'
âGrandma, Luce, Daniel, Grandpa,' said Nevill, seeming to follow out his father's thought. âVenice, Father, Graham, Isabel. And he is here too, and Hatton. And Mother and James.'
âFather is the important person today,' said Eleanor.
âWe are all Father's,' said her son, supporting her view.
âAnd he is obliged to leave us.'
âNo,' said Nevill, in a light tone. âFather is not going away any more.'
âHe has heard too much of it,' said Fulbert.
âWe have all done that,' said Regan, rapidly blinking her eyes.
Luce put a chair for her grandmother and stood stroking her shoulders, and Nevill ran to another chair and climbed on to it, and keeping his eyes on Regan, pulled out his handkerchief and retained it in his hand.
âWhy are you in out-of-door things, Luce?' said Eleanor, surprised by any sign of personal pursuits.
âBecause I am going to the station, Mother.'
âAs well as the boys?'
âYes.'
âWill there be room in the carriage?'
âYes.'
âWon't it upset you?'
âYes,' said Luce, smiling, âbut that need not be taken into account.'
âBut won't that be depressing for your father at the last?'
âNo, Mother, he will not be conscious of it.'
âBut is there any point in your going?'
âYes,' said Luce, now with a note of patience. âFather will have a woman to see him off, as well as young men.'
âI should find it too much.'
âI am in my way a strong woman, Mother.'
âAnd I am a weak one, I suppose.'
âIt is the first time I have heard a woman make that claim, without any sign of satisfaction,' said Graham, who had been watching his mother.
âI have no fault to find with the strength or the weakness,' said Fulbert. âThey are both after my heart.'
Luce moved her hands more rapidly on Regan's shoulders, as if to stave off any impending emotion.
âI hope the occasion may prove a turning point in Graham's life,' said Daniel.
Venice laughed, and Eleanor glanced at her in mute question of such a sound.
âMother,' said Luce, in a low tone, âlet Father leave us in a happy atmosphere.'
âIt can hardly be that, my dear, when he is going for six months.'
âNot after he has gone. But while he is here, let us stand up to the test.'
âIsabel looks as if she were at a funeral,' said Eleanor, as if this were going beyond the suitable point.
âShe may be right,' said Regan.
âI don't want her father to remember her like that.'
âWhy is it assumed that people forget all moments but the last?' said Daniel.
Isabel broke into tears; Fulbert put his arm about her; she could not control her weeping, and it became almost loud. Hatton came round the staircase and stood with her eyes upon her, as if debating her course.
âIsabel dear, if you cannot control yourself, Hatton must take you upstairs, as if you were one of the little ones,' said Eleanor, speaking as though her daughter were nearer to this stage than she was.
âShe will come and sit by Grandma,' said Regan, using the same manner, but also the gift for doing so.
Isabel sat on the floor at Regan's feet; the latter began to stroke her hair, and Luce noted the action and glided away, seeing her own ministrations rendered unnecessary by this transference of thought to another.
âWhat are you doing, Gavin?' said Eleanor.
âDrawing,' said her son, continuing the occupation.
âIsn't that rather a strange way of spending your last half-hour with Father?'
âNo.'
âWhat makes you do it just now?'
âNothing.'
âLet me see what you are drawing.'
âNo,' said Gavin, pocketing the paper.
âThat is not nice behaviour. But I expect you are upset by Father's leaving us.'
âNo, I am not.'
âHe will draw,' said Nevill, throwing himself off his chair and running to his brother.
Gavin turned aside.
âLet him do it, Gavin,' said Eleanor.
Gavin pursued his way.
âLet him have a piece of paper.'
âI only have the one piece.'
Nevill stood with his feet apart and his arms at his sides, on the point of surrendering himself to a lament of frustration.
âWill my good, useful girl get him a pencil and paper?' said Eleanor.
Venice recognized herself in the description, and was in time to prevent Hatton, who had partly descended the stairs, from coming further. Nevill put the paper on a chair, and stood, pushing the pencil rather violently about it, as if he were unfitted by emotional stress for normal application.
âWhat is the mystery about Gavin's drawing, Honor?' said Eleanor.
âThere isn't one, Mother.'
âWhat is he drawing?'
âA portrait of Father.'
âOh, that is what it is; that is very nice,' said Eleanor, as though finding herself wrong in some surmise to which this adjective could not be applied. âThat was the right thing to think of, wasn't it?'