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Old Wives’ Tale, The
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER II THE MEETING - PART I
Arnold Bennett
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       _ Soon after dinner one day in the following spring, Mr. Critchlow
       knocked at Constance's door. She was seated in the rocking-chair
       in front of the fire in the parlour. She wore a large 'rough'
       apron, and with the outlying parts of the apron she was rubbing
       the moisture out of the coat of a young wire-haired fox-terrier,
       for whom no more original name had been found than 'Spot.' It is
       true that he had a spot. Constance had more than once called the
       world to witness that she would never have a young dog again,
       because, as she said, she could not be always running about after
       them, and they ate the stuffing out of the furniture. But her last
       dog had lived too long; a dog can do worse things than eat
       furniture; and, in her natural reaction against age in dogs, and
       also in the hope of postponing as long as possible the inevitable
       sorrow and upset which death causes when it takes off a domestic
       pet, she had not known how to refuse the very desirable fox-
       terrier aged ten months that an acquaintance had offered to her.
       Spot's beautiful pink skin could be seen under his disturbed hair;
       he was exquisitely soft to the touch, and to himself he was
       loathsome. His eyes continually peeped forth between corners of
       the agitated towel, and they were full of inquietude and shame.
       Amy was assisting at this performance, gravely on the watch to see
       that Spot did not escape into the coal-cellar. She opened the door
       to Mr. Critchlow's knock. Mr. Critchlow entered without any
       formalities, as usual. He did not seem to have changed. He had the
       same quantity of white hair, he wore the same long white apron,
       and his voice (which showed however an occasional tendency to
       shrillness) had the same grating quality. He stood fairly
       straight. He was carrying a newspaper in his vellum hand.
       "Well, missis!" he said.
       "That will do, thank you, Amy," said Constance, quietly. Amy went
       slowly.
       "So ye're washing him for her!" said Mr. Critchlow.
       "Yes," Constance admitted. Spot glanced sharply at the aged man.
       "An' ye seen this bit in the paper about Sophia?" he asked,
       holding the Signal for her inspection.
       "About Sophia?" cried Constance. "What's amiss?"
       "Nothing's amiss. But they've got it. It's in the 'Staffordshire
       day by day' column. Here! I'll read it ye." He drew a long wooden
       spectacle-case from his waistcoat pocket, and placed a second pair
       of spectacles on his nose. Then he sat down on the sofa, his knees
       sticking out pointedly, and read: "'We understand that Mrs. Sophia
       Scales, proprietress of the famous Pension Frensham in the Rue
       Lord Byron, Paris'--it's that famous that nobody in th' Five Towns
       has ever heard of it--'is about to pay a visit to her native town,
       Bursley, after an absence of over thirty years. Mrs. Scales
       belonged to the well-known and highly respected family of Baines.
       She has recently disposed of the Pension Frensham to a limited
       company, and we are betraying no secret in stating that the price
       paid ran well into five figures.' So ye see!" Mr. Critchlow
       commented.
       "How do those Signal people find out things?" Constance murmured.
       "Eh, bless ye, I don't know," said Mr. Critchlow.
       This was an untruth. Mr. Critchlow had himself given the
       information to the new editor of the Signal, who had soon been
       made aware of Critchlow's passion for the press, and who knew how
       to make use of it.
       "I wish it hadn't appeared just to-day," said Constance.
       "Why?"
       "Oh! I don't know, I wish it hadn't."
       "Well, I'll be touring on, missis," said Mr. Critchlow, meaning
       that he would go.
       He left the paper, and descended the steps with senile
       deliberation. It was characteristic that he had shown no curiosity
       whatever as to the details of Sophia's arrival.
       Constance removed her apron,, wrapped Spot up in it, and put him
       in a corner of the sofa. She then abruptly sent Amy out to buy a
       penny time-table.
       "I thought you were going by tram to Knype," Amy observed.
       "I have decided to go by train," said Constance, with cold
       dignity, as if she had decided the fate of nations. She hated such
       observations from Amy, who unfortunately lacked, in an increasing
       degree, the supreme gift of unquestioning obedience.
       When Amy came breathlessly back, she found Constance in her
       bedroom, withdrawing crumpled balls of paper from the sleeves of
       her second-best mantle. Constance scarcely ever wore this mantle.
       In theory it was destined for chapel on wet Sundays; in practice
       it had remained long in the wardrobe, Sundays having been
       obstinately fine for weeks and weeks together. It was a mantle
       that Constance had never really liked. But she was not going to
       Knype to meet Sophia in her everyday mantle; and she had no
       intention of donning her best mantle for such an excursion. To
       make her first appearance before Sophia in the best mantle she
       had--this would have been a sad mistake of tactics! Not only would
       it have led to an anti-climax on Sunday, but it would have given
       to Constance the air of being in awe of Sophia. Now Constance was
       in truth a little afraid of Sophia; in thirty years Sophia might
       have grown into anything, whereas Constance had remained just
       Constance. Paris was a great place; and it was immensely far off.
       And the mere sound of that limited company business was
       intimidating. Imagine Sophia having by her own efforts created
       something which a real limited company wanted to buy and had
       bought! Yes, Constance was afraid, but she did not mean to show
       her fear in her mantle. After all, she was the elder. And she had
       her dignity too--and a lot of it--tucked away in her secret heart,
       hidden within the mildness of that soft exterior. So she had
       decided on the second-best mantle, which, being seldom used, had
       its sleeves stuffed with paper to the end that they might keep
       their shape and their 'fall.' The little balls of paper were
       strewed over the bed.
       "There's a train at a quarter to three, gets to Knype at ten
       minutes past." said Amy. officiously. "But supposing it was only
       three minutes late and the London train was prompt, then you might
       miss her. Happen you'd better take the two fifteen to be on the
       safe side."
       "Let me look," said Constance, firmly. "Please put all this paper
       in the wardrobe."
       She would have preferred not to follow Amy's suggestion, but it
       was so incontestably wise that she was obliged to accept it.
       "Unless ye go by tram," said Amy. "That won't mean starting quite
       so soon."
       But Constance would not go by tram. If she took the tram she would
       be bound to meet people who had read the Signal, and who would
       say, with their stupid vacuity: "Going to meet your sister at
       Knype?" And then tiresome conversations would follow. Whereas, in
       the train, she would choose a compartment, and would be far less
       likely to encounter chatterers.
       There was now not a minute to lose. And the excitement which had
       been growing in that house for days past, under a pretence of
       calm, leapt out swiftly into the light of the sun, and was
       unashamed. Amy had to help her mistress make herself as comely as
       she could be made without her best dress, mantle, and bonnet. Amy
       was frankly consulted as to effects. The barrier of class was
       lowered for a space. Many years had elapsed since Constance had
       been conscious of a keen desire to look smart. She was reminded of
       the days when, in full fig for chapel, she would dash downstairs
       on a Sunday morning, and, assuming a pose for inspection at the
       threshold of the parlour, would demand of Samuel: "Shall I do?"
       Yes, she used to dash downstairs, like a child, and yet in those
       days she had thought herself so sedate and mature! She sighed,
       half with lancinating regret, and half in gentle disdain of that
       mercurial creature aged less than thirty. At fifty-one she
       regarded herself as old. And she was old. And Amy had the tricks
       and manners of an old spinster. Thus the excitement in the house
       was an 'old' excitement, and, like Constance's desire to look
       smart, it had its ridiculous side, which was also its tragic side,
       the side that would have made a boor guffaw, and a hysterical fool
       cry, and a wise man meditate sadly upon the earth's fashion of
       renewing itself.
       At half-past one Constance was dressed, with the exception of her
       gloves. She looked at the clock a second time to make sure that
       she might safely glance round the house without fear of missing
       the train. She went up into the bedroom on the second-floor, her
       and Sophia's old bedroom, which she had prepared with enormous
       care for Sophia. The airing of that room had been an enterprise of
       days, for, save by a minister during the sittings of the Wesleyan
       Methodist Conference at Bursley, it had never been occupied since
       the era when Maria Insull used occasionally to sleep in the house.
       Cyril clung to his old room on his visits. Constance had an ample
       supply of solid and stately furniture, and the chamber destined
       for Sophia was lightened in every corner by the reflections of
       polished mahogany. It was also fairly impregnated with the odour
       of furniture paste--an odour of which no housewife need be
       ashamed. Further, it had been re-papered in a delicate blue, with
       one of the new 'art' patterns. It was a 'Baines' room. And
       Constance did not care where Sophia came from, nor what Sophia had
       been accustomed to, nor into what limited company Sophia had been
       transformed--that room was adequate! It could not have been
       improved upon. You had only to look at the crocheted mats--even
       those on the washstand under the white-and-gold ewer and other
       utensils. It was folly to expose such mats to the splashings of a
       washstand, but it was sublime folly. Sophia might remove them if
       she cared. Constance was house-proud; house-pride had slumbered
       within her; now it blazed forth.
       A fire brightened the drawing-room, which was a truly magnificent
       apartment, a museum of valuables collected by the Baines and the
       Maddack families since the year 1840, tempered by the latest
       novelties in antimacassars and cloths. In all Bursley there could
       have been few drawing-rooms to compare with Constance's. Constance
       knew it. She was not afraid of her drawing-room being seen by
       anybody.
       She passed for an instant into her own bedroom, where Amy was
       patiently picking balls of paper from the bed.
       "Now you quite understand about tea?" Constance asked.
       "Oh yes, 'm," said Amy, as if to say: "How much oftener are you
       going to ask me that question?" "Are you off now, 'm?"
       "Yes," said Constance. "Come and fasten the front-door after me."
       They descended together to the parlour. A white cloth for tea lay
       folded on the table. It was of the finest damask that skill could
       choose and money buy. It was fifteen years old, and had never been
       spread. Constance would not have produced it for the first meal,
       had she not possessed two other of equal eminence. On the
       harmonium were ranged several jams and cakes, a Bursley pork-pie,
       and some pickled salmon; with the necessary silver. All was there.
       Amy could not go wrong. And crocuses were in the vases on the
       mantelpiece. Her 'garden,' in the phrase which used to cause
       Samuel to think how extraordinarily feminine she was! It was a
       long time since she had had a 'garden' on the mantelpiece. Her
       interest in her chronic sciatica and in her palpitations had grown
       at the expense of her interest in gardens. Often, when she had
       finished the complicated processes by which her furniture and
       other goods were kept in order, she had strength only to 'rest.'
       She was rather a fragile, small, fat woman, soon out of breath,
       easily marred. This business of preparing for the advent of Sophia
       had appeared to her genuinely colossal. However, she had come
       through it very well. She was in pretty good health; only a little
       tired, and more than a little anxious and nervous, as she gave the
       last glance.
       "Take away that apron, do!" she said to Amy, pointing to the rough
       apron in the corner of the sofa. "By the way, where is Spot?"
       "Spot, m'm?" Amy ejaculated.
       Both their hearts jumped. Amy instinctively looked out of the
       window. He was there, sure enough, in the gutter, studying the
       indescribabilities of King Street. He had obviously escaped when
       Amy came in from buying the time-table. The woman's face was
       guilty.
       "Amy, I wonder AT you!" exclaimed Constance, tragically. She
       opened the door.
       "Well, I never did see the like of that dog!" murmured Amy.
       "Spot!" his mistress commanded. "Come here at once. Do you hear
       me?"
       Spot turned sharply and gazed motionless at Constance. Then with a
       toss of the head he dashed off to the corner of the Square, and
       gazed motionless again. Amy went forth to catch him. After an age
       she brought him in, squealing. He was in a state exceedingly
       offensive to the eye and to the nose. He had effectively got rid
       of the smell of soap, which he loathed. Constance could have wept.
       It did really appear to her that nothing had gone right that day.
       And Spot had the most innocent, trustful air. Impossible to make
       him realize that his aunt Sophia was coming. He would have sold
       his entire family into servitude in order to buy ten yards of King
       Street gutter.
       "You must wash him in the scullery, that's all there is for it,"
       said Constance, controlling herself. "Put that apron on, and don't
       forget one of your new aprons when you open the door. Better shut
       him up in Mr. Cyril's bedroom when you've dried him."
       And she went, charged with worries, clasping her bag and her
       umbrella and smoothing her gloves, and spying downwards at the
       folds of her mantle.
       "That's a funny way to go to Bursley Station, that is," said Amy,
       observing that Constance was descending King Street instead of
       crossing it into Wedgwood Street. And she caught Spot 'a fair
       clout on the head,' to indicate to him that she had him alone in
       the house now.
       Constance was taking a round-about route to the station, so that,
       if stopped by acquaintances, she should not be too obviously going
       to the station. Her feelings concerning the arrival of Sophia, and
       concerning the town's attitude towards it, were very complex.
       She was forced to hurry. And she had risen that morning with plans
       perfectly contrived for the avoidance of hurry. She disliked hurry
       because it always 'put her about.' _
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Preface
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 1. The Square - Part 1
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 1. The Square - Part 2
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 1. The Square - Part 3
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 2. The Tooth - Part 1
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 2. The Tooth - Part 2
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 2. The Tooth - Part 3
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 3. A Battle - Part 1
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 3. A Battle - Part 2
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 3. A Battle - Part 3
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 3. A Battle - Part 4
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 3. A Battle - Part 5
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER IV - ELEPHANT - PART I
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER IV - ELEPHANT - PART II
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER IV - ELEPHANT - PART III
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER IV - ELEPHANT - PART IV
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER V - THE TRAVELLER - PART I
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER V - THE TRAVELLER - PART II
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER V - THE TRAVELLER - PART III
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER V - THE TRAVELLER - PART IV
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER VI - ESCAPADE - PART I
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER VI - ESCAPADE - PART II
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER VI - ESCAPADE - PART III
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER VI - ESCAPADE - PART IV
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER VII - A DEFEAT - PART I
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER VII - A DEFEAT - PART II
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER VII - A DEFEAT - PART III
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER I - REVOLUTION - PART I
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER I - REVOLUTION - PART II
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER I - REVOLUTION - PART III
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER I - REVOLUTION - PART IV
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER II - CHRISTMAS AND THE FUTURE - PART I
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER II - CHRISTMAS AND THE FUTURE - PART II
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER II - CHRISTMAS AND THE FUTURE - PART III
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER II - CHRISTMAS AND THE FUTURE - PART IV
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER III - CYRIL - PART I
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER III - CYRIL - PART II
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER IV - CRIME - PART I
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER IV - CRIME - PART II
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER IV - CRIME - PART III
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER V - ANOTHER CRIME - PART I
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER V - ANOTHER CRIME - PART II
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER V - ANOTHER CRIME - PART III
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER V - ANOTHER CRIME - PART IV
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER V - ANOTHER CRIME - PART V
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VI - THE WIDOW - PART I
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VI - THE WIDOW - PART II
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VI - THE WIDOW - PART III
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VII - BRICKS AND MORTAR - PART I
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VII - BRICKS AND MORTAR - PART II
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VII - BRICKS AND MORTAR - PART III
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VIII - THE PROUDEST MOTHER - PART I
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VIII - THE PROUDEST MOTHER - PART II
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VIII - THE PROUDEST MOTHER - PART III
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER I - THE ELOPEMENT - PART I
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER I - THE ELOPEMENT - PART II
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER II - SUPPER - PART I
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER II - SUPPER - PART II
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER III - AN AMBITION SATISFIED - PART I
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER III - AN AMBITION SATISFIED - PART II
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER III - AN AMBITION SATISFIED - PART III
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER III - AN AMBITION SATISFIED - PART IV
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER IV - A CRISIS FOR GERALD - PART I
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER IV - A CRISIS FOR GERALD - PART II
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER IV - A CRISIS FOR GERALD - PART III
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER IV - A CRISIS FOR GERALD - PART IV
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER IV - A CRISIS FOR GERALD - PART V
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER V - FEVER - PART I
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER V - FEVER - PART II
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER V - FEVER - PART III
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER V - FEVER - PART IV
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER V - FEVER - PART V
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER VI - THE SIEGE - PART I
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER VI - THE SIEGE - PART II
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER VI - THE SIEGE - PART III
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER VI - THE SIEGE - PART IV
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER VI - THE SIEGE - PART V
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER VII - SUCCESS - PART I
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER VII - SUCCESS - PART II
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER VII - SUCCESS - PART III
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER I - FRENSHAM'S - PART I
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER I - FRENSHAM'S - PART II
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER I - FRENSHAM'S - PART III
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER I - FRENSHAM'S - PART IV
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER I - FRENSHAM'S - PART V
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER II THE MEETING - PART I
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER II THE MEETING - PART II
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER II THE MEETING - PART III
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER III TOWARDS HOTEL LIFE - PART I
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER III TOWARDS HOTEL LIFE - PART II
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER III TOWARDS HOTEL LIFE - PART III
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER III TOWARDS HOTEL LIFE - PART IV
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER III TOWARDS HOTEL LIFE - PART V
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER III TOWARDS HOTEL LIFE - PART VI
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER IV END OF SOPHIA - PART I
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER IV END OF SOPHIA - PART II
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER IV END OF SOPHIA - PART III
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER IV END OF SOPHIA - PART IV
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER V - END OF CONSTANCE - PART I
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER V - END OF CONSTANCE - PART II
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER V - END OF CONSTANCE - PART III
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER V - END OF CONSTANCE - PART IV
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER V - END OF CONSTANCE - PART V