Read Parents and Children Online
Authors: Ivy Compton-Burnett
âDid we know what Father did for us by his mere presence?' said Luce. âWe think of service as coming from definite action. This is a lesson.'
âHe will come back and find himself a god,' said Daniel. âThat will make a hard demand on him.'
âI only want him as he is,' said Eleanor, raising her eyes. âMiss Mitford, you must think this is a strange scene to arise out of nothing.'
âI don't know how it could do that.'
âWell, to develop from a trifle, or to have the trifle made the reason of it. No doubt the emotions were there, and had to come out.'
âI hope it has been a relief,' said Miss Mitford.
âYes, I think it has. I believe I feel the better for it. Do you, my Isabel?'
âNo, I don't think so. I had no emotions until the scene made them. I think I feel the worse.'
Regan gave a kind laugh.
âI don't expect you understand yourself,' said Eleanor, gently. âYour father is the person who understands you. Poor child, you are one of the greatest sufferers from his absence.'
Isabel naturally began to cry. Venice glanced about in some discomfort at having no ground for tears. Miss Mitford rose from her seat.
âYes, run out into the air,' said Eleanor, as if the movement suggested a solution of all questions. âTake your letter, Isabel dear. You will like to have it.'
Isabel looked at the note with an uncertain smile.
âYes, it is funny, isn't it?' said Eleanor. âPoor Father! He must have been very busy. Well, he meant to send you your own message. You know that.'
âAnd Mother will know it in future,' said Isabel, as she left the house. âI think she has had a lesson, and one she needed.'
âI wish it were time for me to give your father an account of my stewardship,' said Eleanor, to her elder children. âI dread the prospect of guiding you all for so many months. You do not respond to the single hand.'
âA good deal is to your credit, Mother,' said Luce.
âYou make an exception of this morning. But I only ask that there should be honesty between us.'
âI would ask rarer and better things,' said Graham.
âPeople take perfection as a matter of course,' said Daniel. âAnything else affronts and enrages them.'
âI have learnt not to look for it,' said Eleanor.
âYou make your own demand, Mother,' said Luce.
âMiss Mitford and the girls are coming back,' said Eleanor. âOf course it has begun to rain. It is to be one of those days when every little thing goes wrong. Perhaps they would like to sit with us until their lessons.'
âIs that a risk, if the day is of that nature?' said Graham. âIt has so far been true to itself.'
âCome in, my dears, and take off your things,' said Eleanor. âYou can stay with us for a time. It will make a change for you. I expect Miss Mitford would like an hour to herself.'
âDo I not also need the change?' said Miss Mitford.
The laughter that greeted the words sowed that it did not even now occur to anyone, and Miss Mitford went to the door, striking everyone as a mildly ludicrous figure, with the exception of Graham, who saw her as a sad one. It would have been cheering to him to know her view of herself.
âWell, what is a subject fraught with no danger?' said Luce.
âHardly that one perhaps,' said Daniel.
âLet us talk in our own way,' said Eleanor. âThe subjects will arise of themselves. We are seldom at a loss for them.'
The minutes passed and this did not come about. Eleanor took up her needlework, as if it were a matter of indifference. When Venice giggled she looked at her with a smile.
âThe five of them ought to be photographed,' said Regan, surveying her grandchildren.
âWe ought to have a group of them all, to send to their father,' said Eleanor, âThey have not been taken together since Nevill was born.'
âHow sincerely they speak, considering that they do not consider spending the money or the effort!' said Daniel, to his brother.
âWe must be grateful for the thought,' said Graham. âI see how real a thing it is.'
âFather will no doubt appreciate it when it reaches him,' said Isabel.
âIt is a photograph of Mother that Father would want,' said Luce.
âHe took one of me with him,' said Eleanor.
âAnd one of Grandma too, I suppose.'
âNo, I did not load him up with one,' said Regan.
âHe asked me for one of myself,' said Eleanor. âOr rather he was packing a clumsy one, and I gave him another.'
âHe will not forget us,' said Luce, in a peaceful tone.
âNo, dear, but that is not the point of a photograph,' said Eleanor. âIt gives a sort of companionship, an illusion of the presence of the person.'
âThe real presence must be a shadowy one in that case,' said Regan.
âIs it better to have a photograph of oneself packed or not?' said Graham.
âI see it as a tribute,' said Daniel.
âIt is in a sense, of course,' said Eleanor.
âI expect there was one about the room,' said Regan.
âThere were photographs of all of us,' said Eleanor. âOf everyone in the house.'
âMother said a subject would arise, and it has arisen,' said Graham.
Regan laughed and went to attend to her housekeeping.
âIt does not often occur to your grandmother that I may like to be left with my children,' said Eleanor.
âIt strikes few of us that people want to be rid of us,' said Daniel. âI do not remember having the feeling.'
âI feel a temptation to mark time until Father returns,' said Luce.
âThe house is even duller, the house seems duller than it was,' said Isabel. âAnd that produces a sense of waiting for something.'
âYou cannot be dull when there are so many of you together,' said Eleanor, with simple conviction. âYou have your own rooms and your own interests. And Miss Mitford gives all her time to you, and you seem to find her amusing.'
âAnother subject has arisen,' said Graham.
âI am not going to have any more of them,' said Eleanor, shaking her head. âWe must not make Father's absence an excuse for complaint and indolence. I see the rain has stopped, and there is time for a run before lessons. I wonder if Miss Mitford has noticed it.'
âShe does not notice anything when she is reading,' said Venice.
âDoes she do nothing but read? I hope she will not teach you to be always poring over books. There are other things in life.'
âNot in every life,' said Graham.
âThat is what she does teach us in our lesson hours,' said Isabel. âWe thought she was supposed to, and so did she. At other times she does not interfere with us.'
âI should think Isabel is the last girl to be dull in herself,' said Eleanor, looking after her daughters. âShe is always amusing and amused. And Venice is the easiest child. I should think no schoolroom could be happier. It is nice for James to come home to all of it.'
âSo it all works round to James's advantage,' said Graham.
âYou talk as if he were a pathetic character,' said Eleanor. âHe could not have more than he has.'
âGraham dear,' said Luce, in a low tone, âthings can only be done by us according to our nature and our understanding. It is useless to expect more. We can none of us give it.'
âThat does not take from the pathos. Indeed it is the reason of it.'
âIt is partly the ordinary pathos of childhood, Graham.'
âOf childhood in the later stage, when it is worked and confined and exhorted. For its weakness the burden is great.'
âJames has his own power of throwing things off,' said Luce.
âOf course all my children are tragic figures,' said Eleanor.
âTwo for Mother, and four for Father,' said Faith, disturbing the letters at the breakfast table. âAnd three for Ridley.'
âAnd how many for you?' said Paul.
âSeven, Father,' said Faith, in an unobtrusive manner.
âAnd were they less worthy of mention?'
âWell, there was no need to speak of them, Father.'
âWhy not as much as the others ?'
âWell, one does not want to draw attention to one's own things, when they are more than other people's.'
âI did not know that,' said Hope.
âFaith had a fair method of attracting the general interest,' said Ridley.
âThey are only to do with oneself, after all,' went on Faith, as if her brother had not spoken.
âI wish I had more than two letters,' said Hope. âIt makes it seem as if only two people were thinking of me.'
âIt was very nice of seven people to be thinking of me,' said Faith, in a light tone.
âIt is even better to be the sort of person to be in their thoughts.'
âI did not mean to suggest that, Mother.'
âWell, it was not necessary, dear.'
âFaith is an inveterate correspondent,' said Ridley.
âLetter writing is not a vice,' said his father.
âI think in this case it has become a habit. And people are obliged to write letters in answer to those they receive.'
âI see. It is a good idea to put oneself in their thoughts,' said Hope.
Faith looked down at her letters, as if she would like to make a protest concerning them, but was silent.
âFaith keeps up with everyone who has crossed her path,' said Ridley.
âI see no reason for dropping people, when once I have known them,' said his sister.
âI can't understand people's not seeing those reasons,' said Hope.
âI never lose my interest in anyone I have known.'
âI like to hear about them, and the different ways in which they have gone downhill.'
âThey have not always done that, Mother.'
âThen I think I correspond with them. Two people write to me, to every seven to you. That shows the proportion.'
âI think Faith's correspondents are often a good way down the hill, when she first meets them,' said Ridley, laughing.
âI see no reason for only being interested in fortunate people,' said his sister.
âYou are not good at seeing reasons, dear,' said Hope.
âI like people for their personal qualities.'
âIf they have many of those, they are not objects for letters,' said Paul. âThey would have their own way about them.'
âI suppose Faith won't tell us who her correspondents are,' said Hope.
âWell, I see no point in doing that. It is not quite the sort of atmosphere in which I should choose to reveal them,'
âI am sure they would be very uncomfortable, dear,' said Hope.
âWhat is that letter, Ridley?' said Faith, looking past her stepmother. âYou look as if you had had bad news.'
Ridley kept his eyes on the letter and did not speak. His parents turned their eyes on him, and he remained as still as if he were on the stage. Something about him suggested that he felt he was on it.
âMrs Cranmer,' he said, partly rising from the table, âmay I ask you for a moment of your time?'
âYou may have it all. I cannot do anything with it until I know the subject of that letter.'
âI would willingly postpone your knowing.'
âBut do not do so, dear.'
Ridley sat down again and appeared to be lost in thought, and his father rose and read the letter over his shoulder.
MY DEAR RIDLEY,
I must depend on you to fulfil your word. I am so sick a man that when this reaches you, I shall be a dead one, unless a cable has come to you earlier. There is no need to hasten hard news to innocent people, and the word of my death can come to my family through you. All to be told will follow by a later mail. I have written this letter with my own hand. I know you will serve my wife to the limit of your power. And I will end to you, as you are to be to me,
Your friend,
FULBERT SULLIVAN.
The family stood in silence. Paul was sunk in thought. Faith put her handkerchief to her eyes. Hope rose with an almost energetic movement.
âWell, someone has to be the first to speak. And I can see you expect it to be me. I am the one whose feelings don't have to be too deep for words.'
âWe can't help having the feelings, Mother,' said Faith.
âWhat have you to do, Ridley?' said Paul.
âTo go to Mrs Sullivan, Father, to go to Eleanor Sullivan, and break to her the truth. And from my heart do I wish that this cup might pass from me.'
Faith looked at her brother with open eyes.
âI must not delay,' went on Ridley, as if unconscious of his last words. âI can only make the blow as swift and merciful as possible. I can only do my best.'
âDo you think that perhaps a woman might do it better?' said Faith.
Ridley turned and looked into her face.
âIt was not so that Fulbert left it. And it is not so that it shall be. I do not break my faith with the dead.'
âI only made the suggestion for what it was worth.'
âAnd Ridley has told you what that was, dear,' said Hope.
Ridley looked at his stepmother as if he thought she misused the occasion.
âOf course all the best in people will come out now,' she said. âIt is true that the accompaniments of grief are the worst part. I am always uneasy when people show the best that is in them. I am not talking about Ridley's best, as that is indispensable, but on the whole I prefer people's dear, faulty, familiar selves.'
Faith looked up as if she hardly saw herself in these last words.
âIt is something that we don't seem to be drawn closer,' went on Hope. âThat is what is done by the most distressing things. I am glad we don't feel it to that extent.'
âThere seems no urgency to break the news,' said Paul. âBut Ridley will have to get it behind.'
âI can hardly face the family, Father, with this between us. Even my lawyer's training in inscrutability does not prepare me for that.'