Read The Present and the Past Online
Authors: Ivy Compton-Burnett
âWell, shall I read to you all?' she said, in a tone of subdued cheerfulness.
âI would rather talk,' said Fabian.
âWhat is there to talk about?' said Henry. âThere is the one thing, and we have talked about that.'
âCan Father see us now?' said Megan.
âYes, all the time,' said Bennet.
âCan he hear us?' said Henry. âAnd see into our hearts?'
âIt is better to do what he would wish,' said Miss Ridley, âand to leave that kind of question.'
âWhy do we talk as if he was so much better than he was? Was he such a very good man?'
âI think perhaps he was in his heart,' said Guy.
âYou may be quite right, Guy,' said Miss Ridley. âThat is what I think.'
âGoodness in the heart isn't much use to people,' said Henry. âIt would be better almost anywhere else.'
There was some amusement that was immediately checked.
âIs it wrong to laugh today?' said Henry, on a ruthless note.
âIt is not very suitable,' said Miss Ridley. âAnd we do not feel inclined to do so.'
âAre we supposed never to be happy again?'
âNo, of course you are not,' said Bennet. âFather would want you to be happy.'
âHe didn't seem to want it. Sometimes he threw a gloom over us. Oughtn't we to speak the truth about someone who is dead?'
âWe should speak the whole truth,' said Fabian. âNot only the worse part of it.'
âWe are supposed to speak only good,' said Guy.
âThen there would be some people we could not speak about at all.'
âIf I could choose one thing,' said Megan, in a tone that showed she had not heard, âit would be to have Father alive again.'
âI am sure it would,' said Bennet.
âWhy are you sure?' said Henry. âHe didn't make much difference to her. Sometimes he made her cry.'
âBut only because he felt in that mood,' said Megan. âNot because in his heart he wanted to.'
âWe had a father like that,' said Henry, âand now we haven't one at all. Oh, dear, oh, dear!'
âNow I thought we had come to the end of that,' said Eliza.
âSome things can't come to an end. Things happen that make them begin again.'
âI think it is natural to say it today,' said Bennet, accepting any sign of conventional feeling.
âHow nicely Toby is playing by himself!' said Eliza, who had not lost hold of life in its ordinary aspects;
âShall we see Mater again before we go to bed?' said Henry. âThere doesn't seem any reason.'
âShe will come up to say good night to you,' said Miss Ridley.
âShe doesn't always.'
âI am sure she will tonight.'
âTell her Toby play by himself,' said Toby, pulling at Eliza's sleeve.
As Flavia crossed the hall on her way to the staircase, a figure moved from behind it.
âI heard an hour ago. I have a word to say. I have come at once to say it. You must foresee it. You shall not have it before you. I came into your life and broke it. I can only withdraw. Cassius gave me what he could. I took all he had. I was too sunk in myself to know it. I am guilty in all eyes. I am guilty indeed in yours. I am most guilty in my own. I felt it when Cassius was ill the first time. Now I feel it enough to say it. I am leaving the place. I will not stay to harass you. I will not add to the remorse that is yours and mine. It will be mine to the end. But that is no help to you. I can help you by leaving you. I will give you that help.'
âHow about the boys?' said Flavia, as though this were all that need be said, and protest or question were out of place.
âI have no right to answer that question. I have forfeited the right. I took everything for myself. I will take what I am given.'
âIf you leave the place, they must choose between you and me. They must either go with you or make this house their home. There can be no middle course. It is for them to decide.'
âI see that it is. I do not deserve that it should be. I do not deserve their free judgement and choice. I should have had a
right to ask it, if I had asked no more. I will not think what I asked and took.'
âI am going to them now. I will find out what they choose; this life or another, your home or mine. It is better for me to ask them. I am still the familiar figure and shall meet the natural response.'
âI will not stand between you. I will not even stand aside. I will wait or return, as you bid me.'
âYou may wait,' said Flavia, in an empty tone. âIt is what I should do in your place.'
She went upstairs, a listless figure, while Catherine stood, vital and tense, below. The force that emanated from her seemed to be held in bonds to herself.
Flavia approached the children as though she hardly saw them, as though held by her thought. Bennet stood with grave eyes, stricken by the thought of further strain on them. Miss Ridley put a chair for Flavia in tribute to her bereavement. The latter sat down and beckoned to the elder boys.
âMy sons, I have to ask you one thing, and to ask you to tell me the truth. It is a turning-point in your lives. Your mother is leaving the place; I mean your own mother. Do you choose to go with her or to stay here with me? Take your time and think only of the truth.'
âStay here with you,' said Guy at once, âwhere we have always been.'
âTake your time, Fabian, and keep your mind on the truth. You are not responsible for it.'
âIt is a hard question,' said her stepson, after a pause that told of obedience rather than need. âWe must be drawn in two ways. You have been the mother of our childhood, and that seems to be the greatest thing. But our childhood will pass. And only a real mother can be a mother to men. The time will get nearer and nearer. We must think of the whole of our lives.'
âYou choose to go with your own mother?'
âYes, I choose that.'
Guy spoke through tears and threw his arms round his stepmother.
âI don't want to leave you. I don't want to go away from you. I
don't want anyone as much as I want you. I shall never be glad I have left you. Not even when I have a real mother, not even when I am a man. But I must go with Fabian. To live without him would be the same as being dead.'
Flavia answered in an even tone, almost as though she were quoting the words.
âYou are right to make the honest choice. And it may be the wise one. We shall always have our feeling for each other. It will always remain between us. I shall be the mother of your childhood, as you will be the sons of my youth. If there is nothing else, it is enough.'
Guy's voice came in a shaken whisper, audible only to Flavia and himself.
âBut I shall be a boy for a long time. And a mother does not matter so much to men.'
âAre Fabian and Guy going to leave us?' said Megan, whose eyes had been fixed on the scene. âTo leave us as well as Father?'
âMy poor little girl, it is a time of change indeed.'
âAren't they ever coming back?' said Henry. âThere is not much meaning in a family, if it breaks apart.'
âNot to live with us. They will come to see us, of course.'
âAnd each time they come they will be different,' said Megan. âAnd each time we shall be different too. And at last we shall be too different to know each other.'
In the pause that followed, Bennet's was the silence that spoke.
Flavia returned to Catherine and found her quiet and still, as though she had no right to impatience. She lifted her eyes at once, keeping them under her command.
âThey choose to go with you,' said Flavia. âOr rather Fabian chooses it, and Guy will go with his brother.'
âHe chooses you as his mother?'
âYes, he chooses me as that.'
âI am glad he does. I do not take everything. I leave as much as I take. I am glad it is yours. I am glad he gives it to you. You and I are equal to each other.'
âI hope he will not suffer,' said Flavia, as if her thought broke
out. He is so young. What if things go hard with him?'
âI will talk to him of you. He shall talk of you to me. I will see you through his eyes. I will always do so. He shall come to you without me between you. I will see I am never that. And with Fabian it shall be the same. I know by what a feeble thread I hold him.'
âHe feels he will need his own mother when he is a man. He is old enough to see the future.'
âDo you not see it too?' said Catherine, in her quick, low tones. âDo you not see the further time? When you will have your children by themselves, without those of another woman? As it is natural for you to have them. As it is natural for you to be seen with them. Is there not, will there not be, a recompense there?'
Flavia looked into her face, and there seemed to be a third presence in the hall, the difference between them.
âWhere is Catherine?' said Elton to his sister. âHas she gone to sympathize with Flavia?'
âNo, she feels she has no right to do so. I think she has gone to take leave of her.'
âHas anything happened to their friendship?'
âI believe it has come to an end with Cassius. It seems to have somehow depended on him.'
âThen will she always be at home with us?'
âYou can think for yourself. Don't you see her eyes rest on us in compunction and pity?'
âUrsula, do you realize what your words imply?'
âWell, I hardly dare to do so.'
âHas she any real feeling for us?'
âShe has the right feeling and conquers any other. She is true to her vision of herself. She is really true to it.'
âWhat was the bond between her and Flavia, apart from their experience with Cassius?'
âThey wanted no other. That gave them the scope they needed. They could pity and suffer and forgive.'
âSo you are on Cassius's side?'
âWell, he is dead, and when he was alive, he could not live with my sister.'
âConsidering what we owe to the dead, and that everyone dies,' said Elton, âit is a wonder we manage as well as we do. And we do a good deal for the living, considering we owe them nothing. But have we done anything for Catherine?'
âWe have simply gone on living with each other. I have been afraid she would notice it.'
âDoes she think she is necessary to us?'
âIt has not occurred to her that she could not be.'
âHave you ever seen an expression cross my face, that reminded you of her?'
âWell, I have not spoken of it, as I have seen the same thing in the glass. But you may speak of it. It will be easier to bear it together.'
âDoes it mean a likeness underneath?'
âNo, it is only skin-deep, as beauty would be, if we had it. It is fair that they should be the same.'
âDo you think we have qualities in common? Are we all prone to admire ourselves?'
âNo, you and I live over a deep uncertainty. And Catherine does not admire herself until she has arranged some reason for doing so.'
âShe is coming up the path,' said Elton. âAnd I don't think she has arranged any reason. Can it be that for an hour she has been without one?”
âI should hardly think for as much as an hour,' said Ursula.
Catherine came into the room and paused in her usual way.
âI have done it. I have been to my friend. I have broken our friendship. It was a strange one. Good has not come of it. It is time for it to end.'
âI thought that friendships died of themselves,' said Elton, âand that no one could explain it.'
âPerhaps this one has done so. Perhaps it carried its death knell in it. It may be that ordinary things are the right stuff of life.'
âWell, that would explain life as we find it,' said Ursula.
âWe tried to steer a course beyond them. We thought we could do what others could not do.'
âDon't we always think that?'
âWe should not act upon it.'
âI did not know we ever did.'
âI did, and harm came of it. I harmed the man who was once my husband. I harmed him when he tried to serve me. And I thought I could not harm anyone. The common words are true. Pride goes before a fall.'
âIt goes after it,' said her sister. âA fall involves tragedy, and it is so dignified to suffer.'
âBut not to cause suffering.'
âPerhaps that is tragedy at its height.'
âHumiliation at its depth,' said Catherine, standing with her hands clasped. âThe image of Cassius lives with me. Cassius harmed by his own hand, and that hand really mine. Cassius lying dead as the result of my return to his life.'
âSurely that is not true,' said Ursula.
âThe one thing followed from the other. I caused the first trouble, and but for that, help would have come in the second. I will not turn from the truth.'
âI will,' said Elton. âI see we were wrong about Cassius. But I will not be brave enough to admit it. Moral courage drags one down.'
âHe was not like other men,' said Ursula. âWe are supposed to think that of ourselves, and we think it of him. But Catherine was not to blame for his nature.'
âWas he to blame for it?' said her sister. âIt had its claim. I knew him. We had cause to know each other. Knowing me, he served me to the end of his power. How did I serve him?'
âService is too much for anyone. It seems that people either fail in it or that it ends in their death. And we have to take the blame for our natures. Elton and I have always done so.'
âTheir demand should be met. It is the basis of human intercourse.'
âThat is at the bottom of everything. It is odd that we do not try to manage without it.'
âIt constitutes human life. And I have failed in it.'
âWell, we all fail in life,' said Ursula.
âWe miss success. But that does not matter.'