Read Parents and Children Online
Authors: Ivy Compton-Burnett
Sir Jesse Sullivan was a large, strong man of seventy-nine, whose movements were surprisingly supple for his build and age, perhaps the result of his frequent mild exercise, and perhaps the cause of it. His small, dark, deep-set eyes looked out under a jutting, almost jagged brow, and his blunt, bony features seemed to mould themselves to his mood in a manner inconsistent with themselves. This element of inconsistence seemed to go through him. His solid, old hands had a simple flexibility, and his hard, husky voice had vibrations that suggested another being. His eyes were familiar and fond on his wife, less familiar and faintly admiring on Eleanor, comradely and somehow unrelenting on his son, indulgent on Luce, and sharp and piercing on his grandsons, who as males dependent on their education, and dependent on him for its cost, struck him as suitably occupied only at their books. The expense of the training that produced schoolmasters and curates and such dependent men, was so startling to Sir Jesse, who had himself had little education and no thought that he required more, that he put it from his sight; and it seemed inconsiderate and almost insubordinate in his grandsons to act as a reminder.
âIs Father ready for luncheon, Grandpa?' said Luce.
âHe is, my dear,' said Fulbert, running into the room, âand he hopes it bears the same relation to him.'
âIt will be ready at the right time, Father,' said Luce, folding her arms round her knees in preparation for waiting.
âI suppose Graham must come to meals,' said Daniel. âThere ought to be some other way of managing about him.'
âWe must eat to live,' said Fulbert.
âBut is that necessary for Graham, Father?'
Luce gave a quick look at her second brother.
âThe gong gets a little later every day,' said Fulbert consulting his watch.
âIt is the someone behind the gong, Father,' said Luce, and in a tone so light and even that it might have escaped notice. âAnd then the someone behind that.'
âYou would think it would help the household to have things on time.'
âSuch a household would be above help,' said Daniel.
âIt is a tribute to Grandma's management that you can talk like that, Father,' said Luce.
âWell, I may be allowed to pay her the compliment.'
Regan looked touched beyond the demand of the occasion.
âThe gong must soon sound with so much behind it,' said Graham, in his toneless voice.
âIt will sound when luncheon is ready,' said Eleanor.
âIt will be our last luncheon without the babies at the end,' said Luce. âTheir holiday ends today. I cannot get used to being without them.'
âLuce has not forgotten her brothers and sister in three weeks,' said Daniel. âIt must be the depth of her nature.'
âYou did not remember them enough to speak of them,' said Sir Jesse.
As the gong sounded through the house, Fulbert walked swiftly to the door and held it open for the women, sending his eyes to different objects in the room, as if he felt no inclination to hurry this part of the proceedings. He rather enjoyed any duty that had a touch of the formal or official. At the table he did the carving, a duty deputed by his father, and performed it with attention, swiftness and skill, supplying his own plate at the end with equal but not extra care. Daniel and Graham were talking under their breath, and their mother threw them a glance.
âYou need not concern yourself with them,' said Sir Jesse. âThey are about to address themselves to their business.'
âIsn't it a repellent trait in my brother?' said Daniel.
âSo is Grandpa,' murmured Graham. âHe and I are of the same old stock.'
âAny word you have to say of me, you can say to my face,' said Sir Jesse.
Graham was about to reply, but his mother's eyes prevented him. He was dependent on Sir Jesse for most of what he had, and this was not a forfeiture it was wise to incur. Daniel took his grandfather in an easier spirit and reckoned with him in so far as he served his purposes. Sir Jesse thought him better behaved, a not uncommon result of this attitude of youth.
âWell, my boy, we must break our news,' said Sir Jesse to his son.
âOf the prospect that takes me from the bosom of my family,' said Fulbert, looking with mingled apprehension and resolution at the faces round him.
âMother, Grandpa,' said Luce, turning steady eyes upon them, âwe should be glad to have this thing cleared up, whatever it is. We have been living for days under the sword of Damocles, and it will be a relief to have it fall. What is this threat of losing Father for some reason unexplained? We should be grateful for the truth, and we feel we have a right to it.'
âYour father has to go to South America to look into the estate,' said Eleanor. âYour grandfather had the final letters today.'
âThank you, Mother. That is at once a shock and a satisfaction. We had no idea what the dark hints might portend, and imagination was outstripping the truth. Now we may hope that the exile will not be long.'
âA matter of six months,' said Fulbert, with courage and ease.
âThank you, Father. That would have been a blow not so many days ago. As it is, we chiefly experience relief.'
âYou could have asked before,' said Eleanor.
âNo, Mother, we could not,' said Luce, meeting her eyes. âThere was that about you, that precluded approach of the subject.'
âWhat led our elders to conceal the simple matter?' said Daniel, in a low tone.
âThe instinct to keep all things from the young,' said Graham. âEven a temporary concealment was better than nothing.'
âSix months is a moderate sentence,' said Daniel. âWe can hardly expect Graham to show a new son to Father on his return.'
Graham glanced at Regan in imagination of her feeling.
âI shall not live six months many more times,' she said.
âYes, you will, Grandma,' said Luce, in an even tone. âProbably a good many more.'
âWhat about me in exile?' said Fulbert.
âPoor Father! You did not expect to have to ask that question.'
âI would go myself if I were younger by a few years,' said Sir Jesse, with an undernote of inflexibility that revealed his true relation with his son. âAnd it is not only for that reason that I wish I were.'
âI cannot imagine you in a stage more becoming, Grandpa,' said Luce.
âI have liked others better, my dear,' said Sir Jesse, smiling to himself as he recalled these.
âPerhaps I ought to pay Grandpa an occasional compliment,' murmured Graham.
Regan made an emotional sound, and Luce came and stood behind her, stroking her shoulders as she continued to talk.
âA great part of Father's duty must devolve on Mother.'
âAnd she will be equal to it,' said Fulbert, in a tone of paying the fullest tribute.
âShe will have but little support in one of her sons,' said Daniel.
âI wish the time were behind us,' said Eleanor. âAnd I may make other people wish it more.'
âA mother's life is not all sacrifice,' said Fulbert.
âIt is not indeed,' said Regan, in allusion to her own lot.
Luce gave Regan's shoulder a final caress, and left her as if her attendance had done its work, as it appeared it had.
âFather, perhaps a word from you would touch Graham at this time,' said Daniel.
âNothing is asked of either of you, but that you shall consider your future,' said Sir Jesse.
âGrandpa, that is rather hard,' said Luce. âMore than that must be expected of everyone. And long months spent over books may not strike young men in that light.'
âThen they are not what you call them.'
âWell, they scarcely are as yet,' said Eleanor.
âMother, that is even harder,' said Luce, with a laugh.
âThe mot abandoned youth is a child to his mother,' murmured Graham.
âMother, you are setting a gallant example,' said Luce. âFather has not a wife who will make things harder for him.'
âWe are none of us taking the line of showing him how much we are affected.'
âNo, we are not engaging in that competition, Mother. But we might not follow the other course with so much success.'
âThose who show the least, feel the most,' stated Fulbert.
âThat is not the line to take with me,' said Regan, with smiling reference to her swift emotions.
âYou are a self-satisfied old woman,' said her son.
âGrandma has no need to wear a disguise,' said Luce.
âAnd have the rest of us?' said Eleanor.
âWell, Mother, many people do wear one. That is all I meant.'
quoted Fulbert, in conclusion of the matter.
âWhy is that so?' said Graham. âIt might be true to ourselves to do all manner of wrong to other people.'
âThe only thing is to conquer that self, Graham,' said Daniel.
âIt depends on the sense of the word, true,' said Eleanor. âIt means it would be dealing falsely with our own natures to do what degrades them.'
âI expect it does mean that, Mother,' said Luce, in a tone of receiving light and giving her mother the credit. âNo doubt it should be taken so.'
Sir Jesse broke into a song of his youth, a habit he had when he was not attentive to the talk, and sang in muffled reminiscent tones, which seemed at once to croon with sentiment and throb with experience. He glanced at the portraits of his dead son and daughter, as if his emotion prepared the way for recalling them; and sang on, as though the possession of life overcame all else.
His wife followed his look and his thought, though her eyes were not on him. She would have given her life for her children's,
and knew he would have done this for nothing at all, and accepted and supported his feeling. The pair lived with their son and his family, feeling amongst and not apart from them. They saw themselves as so young for their age, that they shared the common future. They were neither of them quite ordinary people, but they were ordinary in this.
âWell, don't I deserve a word to myself on the eve of my banishment?' said Fulbert.
âYou do, Father,' said Luce, âand you would have had it, if you had not contrived to forfeit it. I cannot see how we are to live the next six months. We shall have to take each day as it comes.'
âWhy is that a help?' said Graham. âIt seems to spin things out. It would be better if we could compress the days.'
âGraham, are you going to let these months be different?' said Daniel.
âI have not heard either of you say a reasonable word for days,' said Eleanor.
âMother, let them veil the occasion in their own way,' said Luce.
âOur boyish folly covers real feeling,' said Graham, stating the truth of himself.
âWould you like to be going with your father, Daniel?' said Eleanor.
âMother, don't speak in that cold voice,' said Luce, laughing, âIt is not Daniel's fault that Father has to leave us.'
âHe can answer my question nevertheless. Your father is going partly for his sake.'
âIt is a good thing that everything is easier when it is shared,' said Daniel. âIf there were enough of us, I suppose it would disappear.'
âYou would think there were enough,' said Graham, dreamily.
âI am tired of hearing nothing but nonsense,' said Eleanor, with a break in her voice.
âGraham, how many young men have heard their mothers use that tone!'
âI daresay the larger number,' said Eleanor, sighing.
Sir Jesse broke again into song, and sang very low, as if unsure
of the fitness of the words for the audience. Regan smiled with an indulgence that was more apposite than she knew, or betrayed that she knew; and Fulbert took up the song in a strong, metallic voice and with a certain gusto. Graham kept his eyes down, as if he could only meet the manifestation with discomfiture, and Sir Jesse flashed his eyes into his son's and turned to his luncheon.
Luce had sat with her eyes on the men, and now addressed her father, as if quietly putting behind her what she saw.
âFather, is there any writing to be done? I had better undertake it, as my hand is clear.'
âThis is an awkward moment for Graham,' said Daniel.
âAfter my advantages,' said Graham, in his absent tone.
âI had a reminder of those only this morning,' said Sir Jesse. âAn account came with my breakfast. You had nothing at yours but what you could swallow.'
âIt is impossible of Graham,' aid Daniel. âSimply eating at the table! He seems to live by bread alone.'
âBe silent,' said Sir Jesse, with sudden harshness. âI blush to think you have been brought up in my house.'
âWe have always had to blush for that,' muttered Daniel. âBut I did not think Grandpa would ever do so.'
âWill neither of you speak again until you have something to say?' said Eleanor.
âWould you have the lads dumb?' said her husband.
âIt might strike many people as an improvement.'
âMother, you don't mind what you say,' said Luce, laughing under her breath.
âYou must grow up, my sons,' said Fulbert. âI am leaving burdens upon you.'
âI need not become a baby again to comfort Mother,' said Graham.
âIt does not seem to have that result,' said Fulbert. âWell, do any of you give a thought to my exile?'
âMany thoughts, Father,' said Luce, âbut we are not to help it. We are sad to our hearts, but we do not feel guilty.'
âThat must be wonderful,' said Graham.
âWe ought to feel grateful,' said Eleanor.
âThat involves guilt,' said Daniel. âIt seems grasping to have so much done for you.'
âI suppose that is what it is about gratitude,' mused Luce. âI have wondered what it is, that takes from it what it ought to have.'