<h2><SPAN name="chap18"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
<p>Everything he saw was distasteful to him. He hated the blue and white, the
intensity and definiteness, the hum and heat of the south; the landscape seemed
to him as hard and as romantic as a cardboard background on the stage, and the
mountain but a wooden screen against a sheet painted blue. He walked fast in
spite of the heat of the sun.</p>
<p>Two roads led out of the town on the eastern side; one branched off towards the
Ambroses’ villa, the other struck into the country, eventually reaching a
village on the plain, but many footpaths, which had been stamped in the earth
when it was wet, led off from it, across great dry fields, to scattered
farm-houses, and the villas of rich natives. Hewet stepped off the road on to
one of these, in order to avoid the hardness and heat of the main road, the
dust of which was always being raised in small clouds by carts and ramshackle
flies which carried parties of festive peasants, or turkeys swelling unevenly
like a bundle of air balls beneath a net, or the brass bedstead and black
wooden boxes of some newly wedded pair.</p>
<p>The exercise indeed served to clear away the superficial irritations of the
morning, but he remained miserable. It seemed proved beyond a doubt that Rachel
was indifferent to him, for she had scarcely looked at him, and she had talked
to Mr. Flushing with just the same interest with which she talked to him.
Finally, Hirst’s odious words flicked his mind like a whip, and he
remembered that he had left her talking to Hirst. She was at this moment
talking to him, and it might be true, as he said, that she was in love with
him. He went over all the evidence for this supposition—her sudden
interest in Hirst’s writing, her way of quoting his opinions
respectfully, or with only half a laugh; her very nickname for him, “the
great Man,” might have some serious meaning in it. Supposing that there
were an understanding between them, what would it mean to him?</p>
<p>“Damn it all!” he demanded, “am I in love with her?” To
that he could only return himself one answer. He certainly was in love with
her, if he knew what love meant. Ever since he had first seen her he had been
interested and attracted, more and more interested and attracted, until he was
scarcely able to think of anything except Rachel. But just as he was sliding
into one of the long feasts of meditation about them both, he checked himself
by asking whether he wanted to marry her? That was the real problem, for these
miseries and agonies could not be endured, and it was necessary that he should
make up his mind. He instantly decided that he did not want to marry any one.
Partly because he was irritated by Rachel the idea of marriage irritated him.
It immediately suggested the picture of two people sitting alone over the fire;
the man was reading, the woman sewing. There was a second picture. He saw a man
jump up, say good-night, leave the company and hasten away with the quiet
secret look of one who is stealing to certain happiness. Both these pictures
were very unpleasant, and even more so was a third picture, of husband and wife
and friend; and the married people glancing at each other as though they were
content to let something pass unquestioned, being themselves possessed of the
deeper truth. Other pictures—he was walking very fast in his irritation,
and they came before him without any conscious effort, like pictures on a
sheet—succeeded these. Here were the worn husband and wife sitting with
their children round them, very patient, tolerant, and wise. But that too, was
an unpleasant picture. He tried all sorts of pictures, taking them from the
lives of friends of his, for he knew many different married couples; but he saw
them always, walled up in a warm firelit room. When, on the other hand, he
began to think of unmarried people, he saw them active in an unlimited world;
above all, standing on the same ground as the rest, without shelter or
advantage. All the most individual and humane of his friends were bachelors and
spinsters; indeed he was surprised to find that the women he most admired and
knew best were unmarried women. Marriage seemed to be worse for them than it
was for men. Leaving these general pictures he considered the people whom he
had been observing lately at the hotel. He had often revolved these questions
in his mind, as he watched Susan and Arthur, or Mr. and Mrs. Thornbury, or Mr.
and Mrs. Elliot. He had observed how the shy happiness and surprise of the
engaged couple had gradually been replaced by a comfortable, tolerant state of
mind, as if they had already done with the adventure of intimacy and were
taking up their parts. Susan used to pursue Arthur about with a sweater,
because he had one day let slip that a brother of his had died of pneumonia.
The sight amused him, but was not pleasant if you substituted Terence and
Rachel for Arthur and Susan; and Arthur was far less eager to get you in a
corner and talk about flying and the mechanics of aeroplanes. They would settle
down. He then looked at the couples who had been married for several years. It
was true that Mrs. Thornbury had a husband, and that for the most part she was
wonderfully successful in bringing him into the conversation, but one could not
imagine what they said to each other when they were alone. There was the same
difficulty with regard to the Elliots, except that they probably bickered
openly in private. They sometimes bickered in public, though these
disagreements were painfully covered over by little insincerities on the part
of the wife, who was afraid of public opinion, because she was much stupider
than her husband, and had to make efforts to keep hold of him. There could be
no doubt, he decided, that it would have been far better for the world if these
couples had separated. Even the Ambroses, whom he admired and respected
profoundly—in spite of all the love between them, was not their marriage
too a compromise? She gave way to him; she spoilt him; she arranged things for
him; she who was all truth to others was not true to her husband, was not true
to her friends if they came in conflict with her husband. It was a strange and
piteous flaw in her nature. Perhaps Rachel had been right, then, when she said
that night in the garden, “We bring out what’s worst in each
other—we should live separate.”</p>
<p>No, Rachel had been utterly wrong! Every argument seemed to be against
undertaking the burden of marriage until he came to Rachel’s argument,
which was manifestly absurd. From having been the pursued, he turned and became
the pursuer. Allowing the case against marriage to lapse, he began to consider
the peculiarities of character which had led to her saying that. Had she meant
it? Surely one ought to know the character of the person with whom one might
spend all one’s life; being a novelist, let him try to discover what sort
of person she was. When he was with her he could not analyse her qualities,
because he seemed to know them instinctively, but when he was away from her it
sometimes seemed to him that he did not know her at all. She was young, but she
was also old; she had little self-confidence, and yet she was a good judge of
people. She was happy; but what made her happy? If they were alone and the
excitement had worn off, and they had to deal with the ordinary facts of the
day, what would happen? Casting his eye upon his own character, two things
appeared to him: that he was very unpunctual, and that he disliked answering
notes. As far as he knew Rachel was inclined to be punctual, but he could not
remember that he had ever seen her with a pen in her hand. Let him next imagine
a dinner-party, say at the Crooms, and Wilson, who had taken her down, talking
about the state of the Liberal party. She would say—of course she was
absolutely ignorant of politics. Nevertheless she was intelligent certainly,
and honest too. Her temper was uncertain—that he had noticed—and
she was not domestic, and she was not easy, and she was not quiet, or
beautiful, except in some dresses in some lights. But the great gift she had
was that she understood what was said to her; there had never been any one like
her for talking to. You could say anything—you could say everything, and
yet she was never servile. Here he pulled himself up, for it seemed to him
suddenly that he knew less about her than about any one. All these thoughts had
occurred to him many times already; often had he tried to argue and reason; and
again he had reached the old state of doubt. He did not know her, and he did
not know what she felt, or whether they could live together, or whether he
wanted to marry her, and yet he was in love with her.</p>
<p>Supposing he went to her and said (he slackened his pace and began to speak
aloud, as if he were speaking to Rachel):</p>
<p>“I worship you, but I loathe marriage, I hate its smugness, its safety,
its compromise, and the thought of you interfering in my work, hindering me;
what would you answer?”</p>
<p>He stopped, leant against the trunk of a tree, and gazed without seeing them at
some stones scattered on the bank of the dry river-bed. He saw Rachel’s
face distinctly, the grey eyes, the hair, the mouth; the face that could look
so many things—plain, vacant, almost insignificant, or wild, passionate,
almost beautiful, yet in his eyes was always the same because of the
extraordinary freedom with which she looked at him, and spoke as she felt. What
would she answer? What did she feel? Did she love him, or did she feel nothing
at all for him or for any other man, being, as she had said that afternoon,
free, like the wind or the sea?</p>
<p>“Oh, you’re free!” he exclaimed, in exultation at the thought
of her, “and I’d keep you free. We’d be free together.
We’d share everything together. No happiness would be like ours. No lives
would compare with ours.” He opened his arms wide as if to hold her and
the world in one embrace.</p>
<p>No longer able to consider marriage, or to weigh coolly what her nature was, or
how it would be if they lived together, he dropped to the ground and sat
absorbed in the thought of her, and soon tormented by the desire to be in her
presence again.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />