Some Everyday Folk and Dawn Part 28
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It being Dawn's week in the kitchen, she set about collecting the cups in the wash-up dish, and presently some maudlin expression of sentiment on the part of the Rooney-Molyneux reopened the vials of her indignation.
"I'm naturally anxious that it may be a son," he drivelled, "as there are so few male representatives of the old name now."
"And the sooner there's none the better. There is no excuse for the likes of you being alive. I'd like to a.s.sist in the extermination of your family by putting you in the boiling copper on was.h.i.+ng day. That would give you a taste of your deserts," raged the girl.
She was speaking without restraint in the light of the high demands of crude, impetuous, merciless youth. I had once felt as she did, but now I could see the cruel train of conditions behind certain characters forcing them into different positions, and in place of Dawn's wholesome, justifiable, hot-headed rage against the likes of Rooney-hyphen, I felt for him a contempt so immeasurable that it almost toppled over and became pity.
Seeing the little sense of responsibility that is inculcated regarding the laws of being, instead of being shocked at the familiarity of the Rooney-Molyneux type of husband and father, I gave myself up to agreeable surprise owing to the large number of n.o.ble and worthy parents I had discovered.
"The world does soil our minds and we soil it-- Time brings the tolerance that hides the truth,"
but Dawn had not yet sunk to the apathy engendered by experience and familiarity. She adjudged the case on its merits, as it would be handled by an administrator of the law--the common law we all must keep. She did not imagine a network of exculpatory conditions or go squinting round corners to draw it into line as an act for which circ.u.mstances rather than the culprit were responsible; she gazed straight and honestly and saw a crime.
"Dawn, you shameless hussy, you ought to be ashamed of yourself," said her uncle.
"Oh yes, I'm well aware that any girl who says the straight truth about the things that concern them most in life, _ought_ to be ashamed of herself. They should hold their tongues except to flatter the men who trample them in the dust,--that's the proper and _womanly_ att.i.tude for a girl, I know," she said desperately.
"I'm sure this is uncalled for," simpered the hero of the act, rising and showing signs of looking for his hat.
"You'd better run and tell your wife you've been insulted, poor little dear!" said Dawn.
"Look!" said Andrew to me uneasily, "tell Dawn to dry up, will you; she'll take no notice of me, an' if that feller goes home actin' the goat I'll get the blame, an' he ain't drunk enough to be shut up. Blow him, I say!"
"I'm sure," said Mr Rooney-Molyneux, who apparently had various things mixed with politics, "that some men, though the women have taken the votes and their manhood, still have some rights; bless me, it _must_ be acknowledged they have some rights in creation!"
Here he made an ineffectual grab for his hat and a sprawling plunge in the direction of the door, saying, "I've never been so insulted!"
"Blow you! Sit down, Mr Mooney-Rollyno, or whatever you are," said Andrew, "you've got to stay here; and Dawn, hold your mag! You'd give any one the pip with your infernal gab."
"I'm sure it must be conceded that men have some rights?" Mr Rooney-Molyneux appealed to me. I was the most responsible person present, Uncle Jake did not count, the other three were children, and so it behoved me to take a grip of the situation.
"Rights in creation! I should rather think so! In creation men have the rights, or perhaps duties, of G.o.ds--to protect, to nurture, to guard and to love, and when as a majority men rise to them we shall be a great people, but for the present the only rights many of them wrest and a.s.sert by mere superior brute force are those of bullies and selfish cowards. Sit down immediately!"
He sat without delay.
"All that Dawn says of you is deserved. The least you can do now to repair matters is to swallow your pill noiselessly and give no further trouble until you are called upon to obstruct the way again in semblance of discharging responsibilities of which a cat would be twice as capable."
"Yes," said Dawn, "if you dare to talk of going home to worry your wife I'll throw this dish of water right on you, and when I come to think of things, I feel like throwing a hot one on every man."
As she said this she swirled her dishcloth to clean the bowl, and turning to toss the water into the drain outside the door, confronted Ernest Breslaw.
Quite two hours had elapsed since he had parted from us to conduct Miss Grosvenor to her home, where he had been long delayed in argument concerning whether he could or could not address a public meeting. I discovered later that an opportunity to gracefully take his leave from Grosvenor's had not occurred earlier, and that he had quite relinquished hope of calling at Clay's that night, but to his surprise, seeing the place lighted as he was pa.s.sing, he came towards the kitchen door.
Dawn was doubtless piqued that he should have spent so much time with Miss Grosvenor, which, considering his previous attentions to her, and the rules of the game as observed in this stratum of society, gave him the semblance of flirting--perfidious action, worthy of the miscreant man in the beginning of a career which at a maturer stage should cover cruelty and cowardice equalling that of Rooney-Molyneux! Dawn lacked restraint in her emotional outbursts; the poor girl's state of nervousness bordered on hysteria; the water was nearly out of her hand in any case, and with a smack of that irritated divergence from lawful and decorous conduct of which the sanest of us are at times the victim, she pitched the dish of greasy, warm water fairly on the immaculate young athlete, accompanying the action with the e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.i.o.n--
"That's what you deserve, too!"
"I demand--" he exclaimed, but further utterance was drowned by a hearty guffaw from Andrew which fully confirmed the outrageous insult.
"Just what I should expect of you," sneered Uncle Jake, while Mr Rooney-Molyneux, his attention thus diverted from his own affairs, gazed in watery-eyed surprise at a second victim of the retributive Dawn.
"Well, that's about what you'd expect from a _thing earning her living_, but never of a young lady in a _good_ home of her own and living with _the mother of a family_," said Carry, appearing in time to witness the accident.
I said nothing to the white-faced girl, for there was more urgent work to be done in repairing the damage. Hurrying through the house, and reefing my skirts on the naked rose-bushes under Miss Flipp's window, where the dead girl's skirts had caught as she went out to die, I gained a point intercepting Ernest as he strode along the path leading to the bridge.
"Ernest!"
"You must excuse me to-night," he said, showing that my intervention was most unwelcome.
"Ernest, if you have any friends.h.i.+p for me, stop. I must speak to you, and I'm not feeling able for much more to-night."
Thus did I make a lever of my invalidism, and in the gentleness of his strength he submitted to be detained.
Some men would have covered their annoyance with humorous satire, but Ernest was not furnished with this weapon. He only had physical strength, and that could not avail him in such an instance. I placed my hand on his arm, ostensibly for support, but in reality to be sure of his detention, and found that he was saturated. Not a pleasant experience on a frosty night, but there was no danger of it proving deleterious to one in his present state of excitement. Being one of those natures whose emotions, though not subtle, make up for this deficiency in wholesome thoroughness, he was furious with the rage of heated youth not given to spending itself on every advent.i.tious excuse for annoyance, and debarred by conditions from any sort of retaliation. In addition to being bitterly wounded, his sporting instinct was bruised, and he chafed under the unfairness of the blow.
The beauty of the cloudless, breezeless night had been supplemented by a lop-sided moon, risen sufficiently to show the exquisite mists hanging like great swathes of white gossamer in the hollows, and to cast the shadows of the buildings and trees in the silent river, at this time of the year looking so cold and treacherous in its rippleless flow. The wet gra.s.s was stiffening with frost, and the only sounds disturbing the chillier purity of advancing night were the erratic bell at the bridge and the far-off rumble of a train on the mountain-side. Man still afforded the discordant note, and the only heat in the surroundings was that in the burning young heart that raged by my side.
Oh, youth! youth! You must each look back and see for yourselves, in the aft-light cast by later experience, the mountains and fiery ordeals you made for yourselves out of mole-hills in the matter of heart-break. We, whose hair is white, cannot help you, though we have gone before and know so well the cruel stretches on the road you travel.
Ernest waited for me to take the initiative, and as everything that rose to my lips seemed ba.n.a.l, we stood awkwardly silent till he was forced into saying--
"I'm afraid you are overdoing yourself. Can I not help you to your room? You will be ill."
"The only thing that would overdo me is that you should be upset about this. It must not make any difference."
"Difference between you and me?--nothing short of an earthquake could do that," he replied.
"I mean with Dawn. It must not make any difference with her. It was only a freak."
"Certainly; I would be a long time retaliating upon a _lady_, no matter what she did to me; but when--when--" (he could not bring himself to name it, it struck him as so disgraceful)--"she intimates to me, as plainly as was done to-night, that she disapproves of my presence in her house, well, a fellow would want pole-axing if he hadn't pride to take a hint like that."
"She did not mean anything. She will be more hurt than you are."
"Mean anything! Had it been a joke I could have managed to endure it, or an accident about which she would have worried, I would have been amused, but it was deliberate; and if it had been _clean_ water--but ugh! it was greasy slop-water, to make it as bad as it could be; and if a man had done it--"
The muscles of his arm expanded under my interested touch as he made a fist of the strong brown hand.
"But being a girl I can only put up with it," he said with the helplessness of the athlete in dealing with such a delinquent.
"Did you hear what she said too? Great Scott! it is not as though I had done her any harm! I merely came here to see a friend, and made myself agreeable because you said she was good to you; and, dear me!"
His voice broke with the fervour of his perturbation. He had been wounded to the core of his manly _amour propre_; and to state that he was not more than twenty-five, gives a better idea of his state of mind than could any amount of laborious diagnosis.
"What can I have done?" he further e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed. "Can some one have told her falsely that I'm a cad in any way? She might have waited until she proved it. _I_ would not have believed bad any one spoken badly of _her_." (Here an inadvertent confession of the growing affection he felt for her.) "Even if I were deserving of such ignominy, it was none of her business. I only came to see you,--she had nothing to do with me."
Then I took hold of this splendidly muscular young creature wounded to the quick. I determinedly usurped a mother's privilege in regard to the situation, and glancing back over my barren life I would that I had been mother of just such a son. What a kingdom 'twould have been; and, in the order of things, being forced to surrender him to another's keeping, I could not have chosen a better or more suitable than Dawn. Entering his princ.i.p.ality to reign as queen, while his manhood was yet an unsacked stronghold, she was of the character and determination to steer him in the way of uprightness to the end.
Wistfulness upsprung as I reviewed my empty life, but rude reality suddenly uprose and obliterated ideality. It put on the scroll a picture of motherhood, and mother-love wantonly squandered, trodden in the mire, and, instead of being recognised as a kingdom, treated only as a weakness, and traded upon to enslave women. I turned with a sigh, and we walked round a corner of the garden where, in one recent instance, appallingly common, a poor frail woman had crept out in the dead of night to pay alone the penalty of a crime incurred by two--one foolish and weak, the other murderously selfishly a coward.
Some Everyday Folk and Dawn Part 28
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Some Everyday Folk and Dawn Part 28 summary
You're reading Some Everyday Folk and Dawn Part 28. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: Miles Franklin already has 569 views.
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