THE Weetmans, mother,
son, and daughter, lived on a thriving farm. It was small enough, God knows,
but it had always been a turbulent place of abode. For the servant it was:
"Phemy, do this," or "Phemy, have you done that?" from dawn
to dark, and even from dark to dawn there was a hovering of unrest. The widow
Weetman, a partial invalid, was the only figure that manifested any semblance
of tranquility, and it was a misleading one for she sat day after day on her
large hams knitting and nodding and lifting her grey face only to grumble, her
spectacled eyes transfixing the culprit with a basilisk glare. And her daughter
Alice, the housekeeper, who had a large face, a dominating face, in some
respects she was all face, was like a blast in a corridor with her "Maize
for the hens, Phemy!--More firewood, Phemy!--Who has set the trap in the
harness room?--Come along!--Have you scoured the skimming pans?--Why
not!--Where are you idling? --Come along, Phemy, I have no time to waste this
morning, you really must help me." It was not only in the house that this
cataract of industry flowed; outside there was activity enough for a regiment.
A master-farmer's work consists largely of a series of conversations with other
master-farmers, a long-winded way of doing long-headed things, but Glastonbury
Weetman, the son, was not like that at all; he was the incarnation of energy,
always doing and doing, chock-full of orders, adjurations, objurgatives, blame,
and blasphemy. That was the kind of place Phemy Madigan worked at. No one could
rest on laurels there. The farm and the home possessed everybody, lock, stock,
and barrel; work was like a tiger, it ate you up implacably. The Weetmans did
not mind--they liked being eaten by such a tiger.
After six or seven
years of this Alice went back to marry an old sweetheart in Canada, where the
Weetmans had originally come from, but Phemy's burden was in no way lessened
thereby. There were as many things to wash and sew and darn; there was always a
cart of churns about to dash for a train it could not possibly catch, or a
horse to shoe that could not possibly be spared. Weetman hated to see his
people merely walking: "Run over to the barn for that hay-fork," or
"Slip across to the ricks, quick now," he would cry, and if ever an
unwary hen hampered his own path it did so only once--and no more. His
labourers were mere things of flesh and blood, but they occasionally resented
his ceaseless flagellations. Glas Weetman did not like to be impeded or
controverted; one day in a rage he had smashed that lumbering loon of a carter
called Gathercole. For this he was sent to jail for a month.
The day after he had
been sentenced Phemy Madigan, alone in the house with Mrs Weetman, had waked at
the usual early hour. It was a foggy September morning; Sampson and his boy
Daniel were clattering pails in the dairy shed. The girl felt sick and gloomy
as she dressed; it was a wretched house to work in, crickets in the kitchen,
cockroaches in the garret, spiders and mice everywhere. It was an old long low
house; she knew that when she descended the stairs the walls would be stained
with autumnal dampness, the banisters and rails oozing with moisture. She
wished she was a lady and married and living in a palace fifteen stories high.
It was fortunate that
she was big and strong, though she had been only a charity girl taken from the
workhouse by the Weetmans when she was fourteen years old. That was seven years
ago. It was fortunate that she was fed well at the farm, very well indeed; it
was the one virtue of the place. But her meals did not counterbalance things;
that farm ate up the body and blood of people. And at times the pressure was
charged with a special excitation, as if a taut elastic thong had been plucked
and released with a reverberating ping.
It was so on this
morning. Mrs Weetman was dead in her bed.
At that crisis a new
sense descended upon the girl, a sense of responsibility. She was not in fear,
she felt no grief or surprise. It concerned her in some way, but she herself
was unconcerned, and she slid without effort into the position of mistress of
the farm. She opened a window and looked out of doors. A little way off a boy
with a red scarf stood by an open gate.
"Oi . . . oi, kup,
kup, kup!" he cried to the cows in that field. Some of the cows having got
up stared amiably at him, others sat on ignoring his hail, while one or two
plodded deliberately towards him. "Oi . . . oi, kup, kup, kup!"
"Lazy rascal, that
boy," remarked Phemy, "we shall have to get rid of him. Dan'l! Come
here, Dan'l!" she screamed, waving her arm wildly. "Quick!"
She sent him away for
police and doctor. At the inquest there were no relatives in England who could
be called upon, no witnesses other than Phemy. After the funeral she wrote a
letter to Glastonbury Weetman in jail informing him of his bereavement, but to
this he made no reply. Meanwhile the work of the farm was pressed forward under
her control, for though she was revelling in her personal release from the
torment she would not permit others to share her intermission. She had got Mrs
Weetman's keys and her box of money. She paid the two men and the boy their
wages week by week. The last of the barley was reaped, the oats stacked, the
roots hoed, the churns sent daily under her supervision. And always she was
bustling the men.
"O dear me, these
lazy rogues!" she would complain to the empty rooms, "they waste
time, so it's robbery, it is robbery. You may wear yourself to the bone and
what does it signify to such as them. All the responsibility, too! They would
take your skin if they could get it off you--and they can't!"
She kept such a sharp
eye on the corn and meal and eggs that Sampson got surly. She placated him by
handing him Mr Weetman's gun and a few cartridges, saying: "Just shoot me
a couple of rabbits over in the warren when you got time." At the end of
the day Mr Sampson had not succeeded in killing a rabbit so he kept the gun and
the cartridges many more days. Phemy was really happy. The gloom of the farm
had disappeared. The farmhouse and everything about it looked beautiful,
beautiful indeed with its yard full of ricks, the pond full of ducks, the
fields full of sheep and cattle, and the trees still full of leaves and birds.
She flung maize about the yard; the hens scampered towards it and the young
pigs galloped, quarrelling over the grains which they groped and snuffed for,
grinding each one separately in their iron jaws, while the white pullets
stalked delicately among them, picked up the maize seeds, One Two Three, and
swallowed them like ladies. Sometimes on cold mornings she would go outside and
give an apple to the fat bay pony when he galloped back from the station. He
would stand puffing with a kind of rapture, the wind from his nostrils
discharging in the frosty air vague shapes like smoky trumpets. Presently upon
his hide a little ball of liquid mysteriously suspired, grew, slid, dropped
from his flanks into the road. And then drops would begin to come from all
parts of him until the road beneath was dabbled by a shower from his dew-distilling
outline. Phemy would say:
"The wretches!
They were so late they drove him near distracted, poor thing. Lazy rogues, but
wait till master comes back, they'd better be careful!"
And if any friendly
person in the village asked her: "How are you getting on up there,
Phemy?" she would reply, "Oh, as well as you can expect with so much
to be done--and such men." The interlocutor might hint that there was no
occasion in the circumstances to distress oneself, but then Phemy would be vexed.
To her, honesty was as holy as the sabbath to a little child. Behind her back
they jested about her foolishness; but, after all, wisdom isn't a process, it's
a result, it's the fruit of the tree. One can't be wise, one can only be
fortunate.
On the last day of her
Elysium the workhouse master and the chaplain had stalked over the farm
shooting partridges. In the afternoon she met them and asked for a couple of
birds for Weetman's return on the morrow. The workhouse was not far away, it
was on a hill facing west, and at sunset time its windows would often catch the
glare so powerfully that the whole building seemed to burn like a box of
contained and smokeless fire. Very beautiful it looked to Phemy.
The men had come to
work punctually and Phemy herself found so much to do that she had no time to
give the pony an apple. She cleared the kitchen once and for all of the pails,
guns, harness, and implements that so hampered its domestic intention, and
there were abundant signs elsewhere of a new impulse at work in the
establishment. She did not know at what hour to expect the prisoner so she
often went to the garden gate and glanced up the road. The night had been wild
with windy rain, but morn was sparklingly clear though breezy still. Crisp
leaves rustled about the road where the polished chestnuts beside the parted
husks lay in numbers, mixed with coral buds of the yews. The sycamore leaves
were black rags, but the delicate elm foliage fluttered down like yellow stars.
There was a brown field neatly adorned with white coned heaps of turnips,
behind it a small upland of deeply green lucerne, behind that nothing but blue
sky and rolling cloud. The turnips, washed by the rain, were creamy polished
globes.
When at last he
appeared she scarcely knew him. Glas Weetman was a big, though not fleshy, man
of thirty with a large boyish face and a flat bald head. Now he had a thick
dark beard. He was hungry, but his first desire was to be shaved. He stood
before the kitchen mirror, first clipping the beard away with scissors, and as
he lathered the remainder he said:
"Well, it's a bad
state of things, this, my sister dead and my mother gone to America. What shall
us do!"
He perceived in the
glass that she was smiling.
"There's naught
funny in it, my comic gal," he bawled indignantly, "what are you
laughing at!"
"I wer'n't
laughing. It's your mother that's dead."
"My mother that's
dead, I know."
"And Miss Alice
that's gone to America."
"To America, I
know, I know, so you can stop making your bullock's eyes and get me something
to eat. What's been going on here?"
She gave him an outline
of affairs. He looked at her sternly when he asked her about his sweetheart.
"Has Rosa
Beauchamp been along here?"
"No," said
Phemy, and he was silent. She was surprised at the question. The Beauchamps
were such respectable high-up people that to Phemy's simple mind they could not
possibly favour an alliance, now, with a man that had been in prison; it was
absurd, but she did not say so to him. And she was bewildered to find that her
conviction was wrong, for Rosa came along later in the day and everything
between her master and his sweetheart was just as before; Phemy had not divined
so much love and forgiveness in high-up people.
It was the same with
everything else. The old harsh rushing life was resumed, Weetman turned to his
farm with an accelerated vigour to make up for the lost time and the girl's
golden week or two of ease became an unforgotten dream. The pails, the guns,
the harness, crept back into the kitchen. Spiders, cockroaches, and mice were
more noticeable than ever before, and Weetman himself seemed embittered,
harsher. Time alone could never still him, there was a force in his frame, a
buzzing in his blood. But there was a difference between them now; Phemy no longer
feared him. She obeyed him, it is true, with eagerness, she worked in the house
like a woman and in the fields like a man. They ate their meals together, and
from this dissonant comradeship the girl in a dumb kind of way began to love
him.
One April evening on
coming in from the fields he found her lying on the couch beneath the window,
dead plumb fast asleep, with no meal ready at all. He flung his bundle of
harness to the flags and bawled angrily to her. To his surprise she did not
stir. He was somewhat abashed, he stepped over to look at her. She was lying on
her side. There was a large rent in her bodice between sleeve and shoulder; her
flesh looked soft and agreeable to him. Her shoes had slipped off to the floor;
her lips were folded in a sleepy pout.
"Why, she's quite
a pretty cob," he murmured. "She's all right, she's just tired, the
Lord above knows what for."
But he could not rouse
the sluggard. Then a fancy moved him to lift her in his arms; he carried her
from the kitchen and staggering up the stairs laid the sleeping girl on her own
bed. He then went downstairs and ate pie and drank beer in the candle-light,
guffawing once or twice, "A pretty cob, rather." As he stretched
himself after the meal a new notion amused him: he put a plate-ful of food upon
a tray together with a mug of beer and the candle. Doffing his heavy boots and
leggings he carried the tray into Phemy's room. And he stopped there.
The new circumstance
that thus slipped into her life did not effect any noticeable alteration of its
general contour and progress, Weetman did not charge towards her. Phemy
accepted his mastership not alone because she loved him but because her
powerful sense of loyalty covered all the possible opprobrium. She did not seem
to mind his continued relations with Rosa.
Towards midsummer one
evening Glastonbury came in in the late dusk. Phemy was there in the darkened
kitchen. "Master," she said immediately he entered. He stopped before
her. She continued: "Something's happened."
"Huh, while the
world goes popping round something shall always happen."
"It's me--I'm
took--a baby, master," she said. He stood stock-still. His back was to the
light, she could not see the expression on his face, perhaps he wanted to
embrace her.
"Let's have a
light, sharp," he said in his brusque way. "The supper smells good
but I can't see what I'm smelling, and I can only fancy what I be looking
at."
She lit the candles and
they ate supper in silence. Afterwards he sat away from the table with his legs
outstretched and crossed, hands sunk into pockets, pondering while the girl
cleared the table. Soon he put his powerful arm around her waist and drew her
to sit on his knees.
"Are ye sure o'
that?" he demanded.
She was sure.
"Quite?"
She was quite sure.
"Ah, well
then," he sighed conclusively, "we'll be married."
The girl sprang to her
feet. "No, no, no--how can you be married --you don't mean that--not
married--there's Miss Beauchamp!" She paused and added, a little
unsteadily: "She's your true love, master."
"Ay, but I'll not
wed her," he cried sternly. "If there's no gainsaying this that's
come on you, I'll stand to my guns. It's right and proper for we to have a
marriage."
His great
thick-fingered hands rested upon his knees; the candles threw a wash of light
upon his polished leggings; he stared into the fireless grate.
"But we do not
want to do that," said the girl, dully and doubtfully. "You have
given your ring to her, you've given her your word. I don't want you to do this
for me. It's all right, master, it's all right."
"Are ye
daft?" he cried. "I tell you we'll wed. Don't keep clacking about
Rosa. . . . I'll stand to my guns." He paused before adding: "She'd
gimme the rightabout, fine now--don't you see, stupid--but I'll not give her
the chance."
Her eyes were lowered.
"She's your true love, master."
"What would become
of you and your child? Ye couldn't bide here!"
"No," said
the trembling girl.
"I'm telling you
what we must do, modest and proper; there's naught else to be done, and I'm
middling glad of it, I am. Life's a see-saw affair. I'm middling glad of
this."
So, soon, without a
warning to any one, least of all to Rosa Beauchamp, they were married by the
registrar. The change in her domestic status produced no other change; in
marrying Weetman she but married all his ardour, she was swept into its
current. She helped to milk cows, she boiled nauseating messes for pigs,
chopped mangolds, mixed meal, and sometimes drove a harrow in his windy fields.
Though they slept together she was still his servant. Sometimes he called her
his "pretty little cob" and then she knew he was fond of her. But in
general his custom was disillusioning. His way with her was his way with his
beasts; he knew what he wanted, it was easy to get. If for a brief space a
little romantic flower began to bud in her breast it was frozen as a bud, and
the vague longing disappeared at length from her eyes. And she became aware
that Rosa Beauchamp was not yet done with; somewhere in the darkness of the
fields Glastonbury still met her. Phemy did not mind.
In the new year she
bore him a son that died as it came to life. Glas was angry at that, as angry
as if he had lost a horse. He felt that he had been duped, that the marriage
had been a stupid sacrifice, and in this he was savagely supported by Rosa. And
yet Phemy did not mind; the farm had got its grip upon her, it was consuming
her body and blood.
Weetman was just going to
drive into town; he sat fuming in the trap behind the fat bay pony.
"Bring me that
whip from the passage," he shouted; "there's never a damn thing
handy!"
Phemy appeared with the
whip. "Take me with you," she said.
"God-a-mighty!
What for? I be comin' back in an hour. They ducks want looking over and you've
all the taties to grade."
She stared at him
irresolutely.
"And who's to look
after the house? You know it won't lock up--the key's lost. Get up there!"
He cracked his whip in
the air as the pony dashed away.
In the summer Phemy
fell sick, her arm swelled enormously. The doctor came again and again. It was
blood-poisoning, caught from a diseased cow that she had milked with a cut
finger. A nurse arrived but Phemy knew she was doomed, and though tortured with
pain she was for once vexed and protestant. For it was a June night, soft and
nubile, with a marvellous moon; a nightingale threw its impetuous garland into
the air. She lay listening to it, and thinking with sad pleasure of the time
when Glastonbury was in prison, how grand she was in her solitude, ordering
everything for the best and working superbly. She wanted to go on and on for
evermore, though she knew she had never known peace in maidenhood or marriage.
The troubled waters of the world never ceased to flow; in the night there was
no rest--only darkness. Nothing could emerge now. She was leaving it all to
Rosa Beauchamp. Glastonbury was gone out somewhere--perhaps to meet Rosa in the
fields. There was the nightingale, and it was very bright outside.
"Nurse,"
moaned the dying girl, "what was I born into the world at all for?"