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became close and tight. He had discovered a poem by Jean Ingelow which mentioned Mablethorpe, and so he must read it to Miriam. He would never have got so far in the direction of sentimentality as to read poetry to his own family. But now they condescended to listen. Miriam sat on the sofa absorbed in him. She always seemed absorbed in him, and by him, when he was present. Mrs. Morel sat jealously in her own chair. She was going to hear also. And even Annie and the father attended, Morel with his head cocked on one side, like somebody listening to a sermon and feeling conscious of the fact. Paul ducked his head over the book. He had got now all the audience he cared for. And Mrs. Morel and Annie almost contested with Miriam who should listen best and win his favour. He was in very high feather.

      “But,” interrupted Mrs. Morel, “what IS the 'Bride of Enderby' that the bells are supposed to ring?”

      “It's an old tune they used to play on the bells for a warning against water. I suppose the Bride of Enderby was drowned in a flood,” he replied. He had not the faintest knowledge what it really was, but he would never have sunk so low as to confess that to his womenfolk. They listened and believed him. He believed himself.

      “And the people knew what that tune meant?” said his mother.

      “Yes—just like the Scotch when they heard 'The Flowers o' the Forest'—and when they used to ring the bells backward for alarm.”

      “How?” said Annie. “A bell sounds the same whether it's rung backwards or forwards.”

      “But,” he said, “if you start with the deep bell and ring up to the high one—der—der—der—der—der—der—der—der!”

      He ran up the scale. Everybody thought it clever. He thought so too. Then, waiting a minute, he continued the poem.

      “Hm!” said Mrs. Morel curiously, when he finished. “But I wish everything that's written weren't so sad.”

      “I canna see what they want drownin' theirselves for,” said Morel.

      There was a pause. Annie got up to clear the table.

      Miriam rose to help with the pots.

      “Let ME help to wash up,” she said.

      “Certainly not,” cried Annie. “You sit down again. There aren't many.”

      And Miriam, who could not be familiar and insist, sat down again to look at the book with Paul.

      He was master of the party; his father was no good. And great tortures he suffered lest the tin box should be put out at Firsby instead of at Mablethorpe. And he wasn't equal to getting a carriage. His bold little mother did that.

      “Here!” she cried to a man. “Here!”

      Paul and Annie got behind the rest, convulsed with shamed laughter.

      “How much will it be to drive to Brook Cottage?” said Mrs. Morel.

      “Two shillings.”

      “Why, how far is it?”

      “A good way.”

      “I don't believe it,” she said.

      But she scrambled in. There were eight crowded in one old seaside carriage.

      “You see,” said Mrs. Morel, “it's only threepence each, and if it were a tramcar—”

      They drove along. Each cottage they came to, Mrs. Morel cried:

      “Is it this? Now, this is it!”

      Everybody sat breathless. They drove past. There was a universal sigh.

      “I'm thankful it wasn't that brute,” said Mrs. Morel. “I WAS frightened.” They drove on and on.

      At last they descended at a house that stood alone over the dyke by the highroad. There was wild excitement because they had to cross a little bridge to get into the front garden. But they loved the house that lay so solitary, with a sea-meadow on one side, and immense expanse of land patched in white barley, yellow oats, red wheat, and green root-crops, flat and stretching level to the sky.

      Paul kept accounts. He and his mother ran the show. The total expenses—lodging, food, everything—was sixteen shillings a week per person. He and Leonard went bathing in the mornings. Morel was wandering abroad quite early.

      “You, Paul,” his mother called from the bedroom, “eat a piece of bread-and-butter.”

      “All right,” he answered.

      And when he got back he saw his mother presiding in state at the breakfast-table. The woman of the house was young. Her husband was blind, and she did laundry work. So Mrs. Morel always washed the pots in the kitchen and made the beds.

      “But you said you'd have a real holiday,” said Paul, “and now you work.”

      “Work!” she exclaimed. “What are you talking about!”

      He loved to go with her across the fields to the village and the sea. She was afraid of the plank bridge, and he abused her for being a baby. On the whole he stuck to her as if he were HER man.

      Miriam did not get much of him, except, perhaps, when all the others went to the “Coons”. Coons were insufferably stupid to Miriam, so he thought they were to himself also, and he preached priggishly to Annie about the fatuity of listening to them. Yet he, too, knew all their songs, and sang them along the roads roisterously. And if he found himself listening, the stupidity pleased him very much. Yet to Annie he said:

      “Such rot! there isn't a grain of intelligence in it. Nobody with more gumption than a grasshopper could go and sit and listen.” And to Miriam he said, with much scorn of Annie and the others: “I suppose they're at the 'Coons'.”

      It was queer to see Miriam singing coon songs. She had a straight chin that went in a perpendicular line from the lower lip to the turn. She always reminded Paul of some sad Botticelli angel when she sang, even when it was:

      “Come down lover's lane

       For a walk with me, talk with me.”

      Only when he sketched, or at evening when the others were at the “Coons”, she had him to herself. He talked to her endlessly about his love of horizontals: how they, the great levels of sky and land in Lincolnshire, meant to him the eternality of the will, just as the bowed Norman arches of the church, repeating themselves, meant the dogged leaping forward of the persistent human soul, on and on, nobody knows where; in contradiction to the perpendicular lines and to the Gothic arch, which, he said, leapt up at heaven and touched the ecstasy and lost itself in the divine. Himself, he said, was Norman, Miriam was Gothic. She bowed in consent even to that.

      One evening he and she went up the great sweeping shore of sand towards Theddlethorpe. The long breakers plunged and ran in a hiss of foam along the coast. It was a warm evening. There was not a figure but themselves on the far reaches of sand, no noise but the sound of the sea. Paul loved to see it clanging at the land. He loved to feel himself between the noise of it and the silence of the sandy shore. Miriam was with him. Everything grew very intense. It was quite dark when they turned again. The way home was through a gap in the sandhills, and then along a raised grass road between two dykes. The country was black and still. From behind the sandhills came the whisper of the sea. Paul and Miriam walked in silence. Suddenly he started. The whole of his blood seemed to burst into flame, and he could scarcely breathe. An enormous orange moon was staring at them from the rim of the sandhills. He stood still, looking at it.

      “Ah!” cried Miriam, when she saw it.

      He remained perfectly still, staring at the immense and ruddy moon, the only thing in the far-reaching darkness of the level. His heart beat heavily, the muscles of his arms contracted.

      “What is it?” murmured Miriam, waiting for him.

      He turned and looked at her. She stood beside him, for ever in shadow. Her face, covered with the darkness of her hat, was watching him unseen. But she was brooding. She was slightly afraid—deeply moved and religious.


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