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Authors: Frances Vernon

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‘Did he now?’

‘Well, of course, there’s been such a dust kicked up at home that Kitty’s letter was
nothing
to it. Of course I wasn’t
shown
anything yesterday, because I know there could be nothing to show, no
papers
but oh, you can imagine. Papa insists you’re the very worst kind of Fenian, and of course, he says he’ll cut me off without a penny if I marry you. Truly. So old-fashioned – so humourless – he was shouting so that people
must have heard it across the street. I never guessed he could behave like that.’ She sucked in her lips as she thought of it.

‘So what precisely did he say, about my being a wicked
Fenian,
Diana? Which to be sure, I am.’

‘My dear,’ said Diana, turning her umbrella in her hands and looking at him with eyes as determined as his own, ‘he actually said the police suspect you of having been – mixed up in a minor way with that group of Fenians – is that quite the word – who murdered Lord Frederick Cavendish in Phoenix Park. Years ago. Apparently, there wasn’t enough
evidence
.’

‘Ah,’ said Michael. Suddenly he gripped her elbow. ‘And do you believe them, Diana? Would you believe me a murderer?’

‘Don’t be so melodramatic!’ said Diana, thinking irrelevantly of all he had said to her so fiercely on the subject of free Ireland and the treachery of Parnell.

‘You don’t? Say you don’t.’

‘Michael, I do not believe that, whatever you had to do with the Land League when you were young, you had anything to do with that kind of violence.’

‘I did not.’

Her head jerked. ‘Stop looking at me so coldly.
Damn
you.’

‘Diana! Ah, darling, don’t cry then – don’t cry – hey. But I have to be sure of you, don’t I?’

They cuddled, softly and warmly, and a nurse with a perambulator clucked at them. Michael took his head from out of her hair.

‘Well, shall I be making the arrangements for us to be married as soon as possible, at the registry office?’

‘Yes, Michael.’ How marvellous to submit.

He took hold of her chin, and studied her face, which was on the same level as his own. He had often wanted to be taller and to look down on more people. ‘Diana, this isn’t rebellion against your family? You want
me,
myself, all I can truly give you – not just to escape from home and shock the lot of them? It’s for love you’re doing this?’

‘Yes, I want you … dear one, you do understand? It’s got
nothing
to do with rebellion, as you say. That would imply
that I almost enjoyed their – hatred of you, wouldn’t it? And I hope to God they’ll come round one day.’ To look at him make Diana feel charitably towards all the World.

‘Well, so they may, but I doubt it.’ He did not sound very displeased about this. ‘We’ll be poor, you realise that? I’m not deceiving you.’

‘Yes, of course I realise.’

‘You won’t have more than one maid, for everything. No
servants,
Diana. No pretty dresses.’

‘I can do very well without.’

‘Yes, you’ll look your best without. And when you’re my wife, you won’t be able to see your friends, only mine,’ Michael said, putting another arm round her.


Some
of my friends may not cut me.’ Diana smiled.

‘Perhaps they won’t, then. So we’ll be married in a day or two.’

‘Yes.’ He was reality, she thought, the only reality.

‘I’d have you down on the grass now, if it weren’t so damned public,’ Michael said. He looked with a gleam in his eye at her dark grey dress, which had obviously been chosen because it was sober, suitable for Bayswater and almost middle-class. ‘But of course I can’t disturb your costume. My dear, your discretion is
admirable
,’ he said.

‘Kiss me,’ said Diana.

‘We’ve years to do that, and more,’ said Michael. ‘I said I wouldn’t disarrange your clothes, but I love you.’

When Diana returned to Queen Anne’s Gate it was twilight, and her parents guessed what she had been doing. She had meant them to guess. They hustled her into the morning-room at once, though it was time to dress for dinner at Lady de Grey’s.

Diana wondered why she had never before seen how stupid they were, and how idiotic was their way of life. She remembered her nursery and schoolroom and debutante days, Julian Fitzclare and the battle of the latchkey fought a year ago, and it seemed to her that never before had she questioned anything, or seen any truth at all. Now that she was perfectly certain in her own mind, nothing they said could affect her
even for a moment. Yesterday, she had been affected for moments together: thrown back for whole minutes into their world by the mad revelation that Michael was a murderer.

The cynics about love are wrong, she thought: ‘a cynic is he who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.’

‘For the last time, Diana,
have
you
been
to
meet
Molloy
?’

‘No, Papa, I have not.’ How glorious to lie, and how curious it was that she had never told a direct lie to either of her parents before.

‘Diana, it is – very difficult to believe you are not telling an untruth,’ said Angelina. ‘You hardly seem to want us to believe you. It’s your manner.’

‘Unconvincing!’ said Charles. ‘I am going to repeat myself, Diana. If you do marry this man – and I’ll never give you my consent, blessing, whatever arguments you use, I wouldn’t even if I were satisfied that the police’s suspicions are unjust – I’ll give you absolutely nothing to live on.’

‘No, Papa.’

He glared at her under his eyebrows, and she thought what a fine picture he made. ‘What a pity we don’t live a hundred years ago. I’d have no hesitation in locking you up in your bedroom – absolutely none. I’d do it now, if you were a couple of years younger. Oh, I give you credit for not being fool enough to try to elope, but I’m warning you,’ he added.

Diana imagined climbing down a rope-ladder. ‘Why are you so angry with me?’ she said. ‘You’ve never been angry before. You didn’t shout at me even when I gave up Julian – although you disapproved so much.’

‘Isn’t it clear!’ muttered Lady Blentham.

‘You weren’t proposing then to marry a man who’s very possibly the worst kind of anarchist!’ said Charles.

‘He is not an anarchist, and he’s never plotted to kill anyone.’

‘Whether he is or not,’ said Angelina with an effort, ‘he is a – a freethinker, Diana, and though I suppose you don’t object to that he … He would be an impossible match on every count. My dear, I know you are in love, but you
can’t
marry him. You know that. It won’t last.’

‘Mamma …’ said Diana, turning. Her father stared at Angelina too.

‘In love!’ said Charles, interrupting. ‘Don’t be ridiculous.’

‘I am in love, Papa. Even though you may hate the expression – do you think it vulgar?’

‘I tell you you’re not going to marry him. You can’t possibly do so if you have no money and
I-will-give-you-
nothing,
do you hear me, girl?’

‘Please don’t speak to me like that, Papa.’

‘Don’t you –’

‘Diana, neither of us will be able to see you, if you do this,’ said Angelina, though she did not mean this quite literally. ‘You must not do it. Oh God, if I only had not consented to your having a latchkey, a bicycle! If only I hadn’t tried – so hard – to accept that these are modern times – none of this would have happened. I wanted you to be happy. I blame myself, entirely.’ She was not going to horrify herself by treating Diana as she had treated Violet three years ago.

‘Angelina, don’t be so emotional. Really, my dear!’

‘Mamma, very likely something worse would have happened if I’d been – more innocent, ignorant. Isn’t that what you’re implying? Ignorance isn’t always a protection.’ The full truth of this struck her for the first time.

‘Oh, heaven help us.’

‘I won’t have any child of mine create a scandal. God, how does one cope in these cases – like a damned bad novel!’

Diana stood still, looking straight ahead of her at the undrawn curtains, still faintly smiling, because nothing could touch her save Michael’s hand. She was amused because her parents had at last surprised her, by acting just a little out of character. She had not thought Lord Blentham would be deeply distressed, as Angelina was, but she had expected him to persuade and to try to understand. She had supposed Lady Blentham would threaten and be unrelenting, in her own cold, disgusted style. It was her father, who made a show of his indulgent fondness for her, who was doing that now.

‘Love is not what you think it, Diana,’ said Angelina.

‘It’s silly to talk like this,’ said Diana, looking from one old
person to the other, and thinking how odd and impotent both looked. They had been tyrants, but she forgave them. ‘If you don’t want anything to do with me – if I marry him –’ she said ‘if as a precaution against being locked in her room like a heroine, but she did not really feel vulnerable – ‘then just cut me, I shan’t mind – really, I don’t think I shall. I know what I want, what’s best, and if it happens, after a few months no one will remember – it won’t matter – it’ll be all right. Life is like that!’

This was the longest speech she had made to her parents on the subject of her love. Obviously, they hated her. Diana thought how frail a thing was family love, dependent always on good behaviour. It was that, of all things, which they expected her to try and preserve as the most precious thing in life. She did feel badly when she said: ‘Of course you’re quite right, I shan’t do anything very stupid, like eloping. I do hope you’ll consent.’

‘Don’t talk rubbish!’ said Lord Blentham.

Diana stood outside the registry office and wondered already what on earth she had done. She looked about her, blinking as though it were a brilliant morning, though in fact it was a damp summer day: 15 June, 1896.

She noticed everything, above all the hand on her arm: it was as though she now had to look at the most commonplace things from a wholly different angle. In the street there was a grey horse, a dirty boy, a sweet-shop and a gutter running with a plait of fresh rain. She was glad, she thought, that they had gone to be married in Holborn. Glad that Michael had not chosen territory she knew, which she now imagined she would not try to see again.

‘Frightened?’ he said, leading her down the steps and on to the pavement.

‘Oh, well, the die is cast!’ she replied without hesitation.

‘Love can be a killer,’ said Michael, patting her arm as she smiled. ‘Come, we’re going home! I’ll teach you not to regret marrying me, Diana Molloy.’

‘Home,’ said Diana, crying with happiness at last. ‘It’s
most
efficient of you – to have made a home for me, just like … Dear one.’

For the time being, they were to live in Michael’s studio near Charing Cross. He had persuaded his landlady to let two extra rooms by telling her that his future wife was an Honourable, and that he would soon be able to pay.

‘Shall we take an omnibus? Have you ever been inside one, Diana?’

‘No,’ said Diana. ‘Let’s take one!’

She felt properly transformed by the ride in the smelly, crowded omnibus, and when they alighted two streets from the house she had never seen, it seemed to her that she had
always been Mrs Michael Molloy, wife of a poor artist. And yet the most extraordinary moment, at which Michael might prove that the descriptions given in
Fanny
Hill
were based on fact, was still to come. She was as nervous as an unkissed virgin was expected to be.

*

Michael looked down at his wife’s hot face, and took a strand of hair off her forehead. She had taken kindly to the delightful pain which was his gift to her, every bit as kindly as he had supposed. He had been very careful with her, pressing but gentle, as he had been ever since their first meeting – six weeks ago. He meant never to change, because he loved her so much and, against heavy odds, had succeeded in gaining her. He reflected in his present triumph that despair was ridiculous, that all his life he had been able to gain anything, so long as he desired it with all his mind and made full use of his talents for insolence and obstinacy. Michael smiled. Whatever it cost him, he would not let Diana suffer too much from the change in her circumstances, which he understood so much better than she did. She had cost him quite a lot already.

‘Alanna,’ he said, a word Diana knew from novels set in Ireland. ‘Sleepy?’

She stirred in the curtained daylight, and a chink of sun picked out the freckles on her pink nose. ‘Michael?’ she whispered.

Diana looked up at him. His odd face was now mauve and blue, shadowed like a face in one of his paintings. Love strangled her and she began to cry: but these were not the quiet tears of bewildered joy which she had shed several times before. Her sobbing was tumultuous, and loud.

‘Diana! Are you regretting this – are you? D’you want a divorce then, d’you want to go back to Papa?’

‘No! No! Never – how
could
you think so!’

‘Why are you crying like this?’

‘I don’t know – I just don’t know. M-michael, you must never be angry, never – you’re all I have now, all I could ever want, just you, just you truly, I’ll die without you, I’ll die if you’re angry! Oh, try to understand.’

‘Ah, it’s the power of sex,’ he said. ‘I won’t be angry then – and I’ll look after you as well as well can be. So long as you never regret it.’

‘How could I do that? Oh, you must understand!’

‘I do.’ Michael held her closely in the hot and crumpled bed. He had already had the sense, in view of her virginity, not to undress her completely or to take off his shirt. ‘We shan’t do this again for two days – not till you’re stronger, and wanting it. What’s more, I shan’t die in the meantime.’

Diana giggled, but did not stop weeping. ‘So much more than I imagined – love – my first time, doing this, and it wasn’t painful, not terrible – not in the way they say, but quite differently! I ought to have felt – oh, it’s more than any human being can stand, it’s not safe, such
intensity
.’

‘Write a poem about it,’ said Michael, stroking her neck.

She calmed down for a moment. ‘Perhaps I will. And will you paint me?’

‘I’ll paint you. Did I really not tell you I would before?’

‘So odd,’ Diana said quietly, ‘what we
did
tell each other – and what we haven’t yet.’

*

In August 1896, the Molloys bought a house in Mornington Terrace, Camden Town. Diana was pleased that her house overlooked the lines running north from Euston, King’s Cross and St Pancras: Michael’s old studio had been next to a railway station, and she found the noise of trains erotic. The house was hers, bought with some of the £500 left to her by her godfather more than a year ago. Michael said it was better to rent, but Diana had an idea that any house was a good, solid possession. She was glad that the Married Women’s Property Act enabled her to use her money as she liked and that Michael, who was willing to give her anything, did not seriously object.

She stood now in Michael’s airy new studio, and thought about servant problems. She had engaged a girl who called herself a cook-general, who cost twenty-five pounds a year but was a good-natured slut and would have to go. Diana
believed that now she had learned to cook eggs and sausages and stew, she could manage the house tolerably with a charwoman alone. Michael, though he had once told her she would have no servants, was now encouraging her to engage two. He wanted a cook and a house-parlourmaid, and he swore they could afford it.

Diana had learnt early that he expected a girl of her class to be thoughtlessly extravagant, and her instinct for economy both impressed, amused and annoyed him. She had explained that, by the standards of their own set, the Blenthams were not rich, and that she had been used to dressing herself on fifty pounds a year. Michael teased her, saying she had a genius for exaggeration, and told her he insisted on employing two servants for her comfort.

Lady Blentham never had any difficulties with her servants, even though she was not able to pay the highest wages. She considered it vulgar to discuss servants’ failings. She had told Violet, though not Diana, that they would work well and stay if given good living quarters and treated with considerate but firm authority. That, she said, was all that mattered. Diana assumed she was perfectly right, but the system did not work with her cook-general. She felt rather a fool when giving instructions about how to buy food economically, because it was an art which she had so recently learnt herself from Michael’s kind, snobbish, former landlady.

Life in the old lodgings had not been serious, it had consisted only of learning and playing and love. Michael had barely worked at all. Things were to be different in Mornington Terrace, where Diana was drifting down into peaceful sediment, having been shaken up and down in a champagne bottle ever since the spring.

On the day after her marriage, Diana had written to tell her parents that she was safe, happy and married, and that she would soon send her address so that they could write to her. This she had now done, and she knew that they would have to look Mornington Terrace up on the map. She had had no letter from them in a fortnight, but one had come today, and it was from Arthur Cornwallis.

My dear Diana,
he had written,

I was nearly as distressed as your dear mamma when I learnt of your marriage, and naturally, I blame myself in part. I have, I think, succeeded in persuading her that not in a hundred years would I have encouraged you to become so wretchedly entangled, as Violet seems to have done. My fatal, wicked desire for entertainment!

Enough of this. I have been speaking hitherto from my worldly standpoint, but I most sincerely pray for your happiness, my dear, and in fact, there are moments when I think the social milieu you have chosen may suit you very well – so long as you are not too distressingly poor. I know that you will never pine and complain, and make life very much worse for yourself in so doing. Love does not invariably lead to
personal
disaster – only to social setbacks, shall we say?

Perhaps you will think me too horribly condescending, if I say that I shall do all I can to advance Michael’s career, now that he has so wickedly caught
you,
my dear. As you know, his earnings are very irregular, and the money he occasionally receives from devoted maternal relations cannot amount to much. Money he must have, and there is but one way for an artist to gain it –
not
by way of the Turf.

He must prostitute himself, alas. He must do his best to become a fashionable painter, that is, one who paints portraits of vain women in just the style they like. À la Sargent, need I say. A faint suggestion of
flow,
but
no
hint of impressionism – a glorying in rich silks – a hint of mystery, and not mere beauty, in the faces of his more intelligent subjects. Of course there can
be
no mystery about such subjects’ faces for the most part.

Diana laid down the letter and looked at the half-finished pictures lining the walls. She had made a discovery since her move, and Michael, before she spoke, had accused her of
making it and confessed that she was right.

He would never make a great, innovative painter. The work he liked to produce was in a very advanced style, in which splotches of strange colour were used to enhance the immediacy of an evening, morning or lamplit interior. Painted with his hand, these bright shadows did not produce the impression that the subjects were living persons with hidden depths.

Michael was humble about the artists who succeeded in doing what he longed to do, but he was often angry too. He said that there was only one English artist worthy of consideration: Joseph Mallord William Turner. Some French moderns approached his genius. He, Michael, was at the bottom of the heap. When depressed, he would drink whisky by the half-pint, and invite his least reputable Irish friends to insult his paintings and himself. Then Diana, thinking that it was easy enough to be Patient Grizelda, would comfort him.

Cornwallis’s letter continued:

One never knows, my dear, what will
take
in this world of ours. Of course a great many people don’t wish for portraits, not even the most sugary nonsense, they only wish to
be painted
and have it known they were painted by the most presentable and expensive Academician to be had. Michael’s talent however is
real,
though not what he likes to think it in his moments of high optimism. In short, he may turn out a more than competent portraitist, admired and commissioned though never, I think,
highly
fashionable with the great and the good.

Very few people besides myself will like to entertain him, but my dear, one never knows. In time your marriage may prove a distinct advantage to him, and your romance, skilfully presented, may help him to gain and you to regain just as large a footing in ‘Society’ as you desire – no more, no less. Your birth and his talent together may produce all manner of marvels. If only it were not for his Fenian connections! But as dear Lady
Blentham says, Society is declining at such a rate that it may soon enough be considered that it is delightfully amusing to be a suspected – how shall I put it?

I think I may be able to persuade the correct authorities to hang Michael’s portrait of Mrs Baring-Wilder’s charming children (
that
is the style I mean. He knows full well he is a master of it, though he insults it – so rightly! But he was glad enough to be commissioned) in next year’s Academy exhibition. Do not, I beg of you, permit Michael to inveigh against the wickedness of further corrupting his art.

Our unfortunate friend may have said of Mr Frith’s great memorial, was it really all done by hand – but there is not the least likelihood of your Michael’s ending either as a latter-day Frith, or as poor dear Oscar did, to be sure. I have the oddest feeling that hard work at hack portraits will paradoxically improve Michael’s real work.

I have the highest regard for you and for Michael, and believe me when I say that, though I was perfectly horrified by the story of your elopement, I shall never have the impertinence to ‘cut’ either of you as I believe your unamiable sister-in-law was ill-bred enough to do in Regent St.
She
shall receive no more invitations from Mabel.

Both of us, my dear, send our love. Mabel adds, I may say, that there is no use crying over spilt milk. An expression of wisdom none the worse for being used by servants.

Yours in the best of good faith, Arthur Cornwallis.

The letter’s tone angered Diana, but there were parts of it which softened her.

She knew that Michael must do more or less what Cornwallis said, and she meant to talk to him about it. She had no intention of going into places where it would occur to people to cut her: the memory of that world sickened her, and she wanted only to live on it, never inside it. Occasionally, it
seemed to her remarkable that this view of hers had not been modified in the course of three whole months of marriage and Bohemia.

Diana sat down, opposite Michael’s charcoal sketch of herself in the nude, and thought about her meeting with Kitty in Regent’s Street two weeks ago.

She, Diana, had been wearing her new style of clothes: fashionable enough in cut, but without whalebone or padding, or hot bands encircling her neck and wrists. Now she wore only one petticoat, and when she went out, low shoes and an old boater hat. A combination, she supposed, looking back, of the Aesthetic Lady of the previous decade and the New Woman of today. To Kitty, dressed with absolute propriety in clothes buttoned tightly over every curve, Diana had looked like one trying to ape a street-urchin from her native Commercial Road.

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