Non-combatants and Others Part 7
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'Stories impossible to doubt,' read Kate, in her prim, precise voice, 'reach us continually of atrocities practised by the enemy....' She read several, unsuitable for these pages. Mrs. Frampton clicked horror with her tongue. The papers she took in were rich in such stories. As it was impossible to doubt them, she did not try. Possibly they gave life a certain dreadful savour.
'To think of the march of civilisation, and this still going on,' Mrs.
Frampton commented. 'I'm sure any one would think they'd be ashamed.'
Kate said, with playful acidity (Kate had reached what with many is a playful age), 'Thank you, Alix. Thank you ever so much, Alix, for getting between me and the lamp.'
Alix moved, her attempt foiled.
Kate read next the letter of a private soldier at the front. 'The Boches are all cowards. They can't stand against our boys. They fly like rabbits when we charge with the bayonet. You should hear them squeal, like so many pigs. There's not a German private in the army that wants to fight. The officers have to keep flogging them on the whole time.'
'Poor things, I'm sure one can't but be sorry for them,' said Mrs.
Frampton. 'Knit two and make one, purl two, slip one, pa.s.s the slipped one over, drop four and knit six.' (Or anyhow, something of that sort, for she had got to the heel, as one unfortunately at last must.)
'It's wonderful how long the war goes on, since all the Germans are like that,' said Kate, without conscious irony, as she took up her own knitting. Hers was a body-belt. 'I believe this new wool is different from the last. Somewhat stringier, it seems. Brown will have to take it back, if it is.'
'I say, just fancy,' said Evie, 'those sequin tunics at B. & H.'s have come down to seven and eleven three. I think I could rise to that, even in war time.'
The war mainly affected Evie by reducing the demand for hats, and consequently lowering the salary she received at the exclusive and ladylike milliner's where she worked.
As she spoke she caught sight of her three-quarter likeness as etched by Alix.
'Goodness gracious,' she commented. 'You've made me look anything on earth! I mayn't be much, but I hope I'm not that sort of freak.'
'It's very good,' said Alix complacently. 'Rather particularly good. I shall take it to the School on Monday and show it to Mr. Bendish.'
'It may be good,' said Evie, 'since you say so. All I say is, it isn't me. It's more like some wild woman out of a caravan. Don't you go telling people it's me, or they'll be coming to shut me up. There's the bell; that's them.'
The Vinney party arrived. It consisted of Mr. Vincent Vinney, a bright young solicitor of twenty-eight; his lately acquired wife, a pretty girl who laughed when he was witty, which was often; his young brother Sidney, a stout, merry youth of nineteen, a bank clerk; and their cousin Miss Simon, the fat girl in the sailor blouse, which was, it seemed, her evening toilette also. (In case some should blame the Vinney brothers for not taking an active part in the war, it may be remarked that the elder supported a wife and the younger a mother, that they represented a cla.s.s which, for several good reasons, produces fewer soldiers than any other, and that they both belonged to the Clerks' Drill Corps, and wore several flags on their bicycles. And young Mrs. Vinney belonged to a Voluntary Aid Detachment, not at present in working.)
They came in with the latest news. The British had been driven back out of a thousand yards of trench they had taken. They hadn't enough ammunition.
'Well,' said Mrs. Frampton, knitting, and really more interested in her heel than in the fortunes of war, 'it's all very dreadful to think of.
But I suppose we must leave it in the hands of the Almighty, who always moves in a mysterious way.'
(Mrs. Frampton had been brought up evangelically, and so mentioned the Almighty more casually than Kate, who was High, thought fit.)
'Well, what I say is,' said young Mrs. Vinney, who was of a cheerful habit, 'it's not a bit of use being depressed by the news, because no one can ever tell if it's true or not. It's all from that Bureau, and we all know what they are. Why, they said there weren't any Russians in England, when every one knew there were crowds, and they always say the Zepp. raids don't do any damage to factories and a.r.s.enals, and every one knows they do. They don't seem to mind _what_ they say.'
'Well, for my part,' Evie said, 'I don't see why we shouldn't all be as chirpy as we can. We can't _help_ by being glum, can we?'
'That's just it,' said Mrs. Vinney. 'Now, there's the theatre. Of course, you know, Vin and I wouldn't go to anything really _festive_ just now, like the _Girl on the Garden Wall_, but I'm not ashamed to say we did go to the _Man Who Stayed Behind_.'
'Why wouldn't you go to anything really festive?' Alix asked, curious as to the psychology of this position.
Mrs. Vinney looked round for sympathy.
'Why, what a question! It's not the moment, of course. One wouldn't _like_ to. _You_ wouldn't, would you?'
'Oh, me. I'd go to anything I thought would amuse me.'
'Well,' Mrs. Vinney decided, 'I suppose you and I aren't a bit alike. I just couldn't, and there it is. I dare say it's all my silliness. But with the men out there in such danger, and laying down their lives the way they're doing ... well, I _couldn't_ sit and look at the _Girl on the Garden Wall_, not if I had a stall free. The way I see it is, the men are fighting for us women, and where should we be but for them, and the least we can do is not to forget all about them, seeing gay musical plays. The way I'm made, I suppose, and I don't pretend to judge for others.'
'It's all a question of taste and feeling,' Kate p.r.o.nounced absently, more interested in a new st.i.tch she was introducing into her body-belt.
The fat dark girl, Miss Simon, came in on the mention of women. It was her subject.
'Women's work in war time is every bit as important as men's, that's what I say; only they don't get the glory.'
Mrs. Vinney giggled and looked at the others.
'Now Rachel's off again. She's a caution when she gets on the woman question. She spent most of her time in Holloway in the old days, didn't you, dear?'
'She thinks she ought to have the vote,' Sid Vinney explained to Alix in a whisper. Alix, who had hitherto moved in circles where every one thought, as a matter of course, that they ought to have the vote, disappointed him by her lack of spontaneous mirth.
Miss Simon was inquiring, undeterred by these comments, 'Who keeps the country at home going while the men are at the war? Who brings up the families? Who nurses the soldiers? What do women get out of a war, ever?'
'The salvation of their country, Miss Simon,' said Mrs. Frampton, 'won for them by brave men.'
'After all,' said Sid, 'the women can't _fight_, you know. They can't _fight_ for their country.'
Miss Simon regarded him with scorn.
'How much are _you_ fighting for your country, I'd like to know?'
'One for you, Sid,' said Evie cheerily, ignoring Sid's aggrieved, 'Well, you know I can't leave mother.'
'And fighting isn't everything,' Miss Simon went on, 'and war time isn't everything. There's women's work in peace time. What about Octavia Wills that did so much for housing? Wasn't _she_ helping her country? And, for war work, what price Florence Nightingale? What would the country have done without _her_, and what did she get out of all she did?'
Mrs. Frampton, who had not read the life of that strong-minded person, but cherished a mid-Victorian vision of a lady with a lamp, sounder in the heart than in the head, said, 'She kept her place as a woman, Miss Simon.'
Evie, who was not listening much, finding the subject tedious, put in vaguely, 'After all, when it comes to fighting, we _are_ left in the lurch, aren't we?'
Sid said, 'Oh dear no, Miss Evie. What price Christabel and Co.? They ought to have had the iron cross all round, the militants ought. They did more to earn it than the Huns ever did.'
'Cheap sarcasm,' said Miss Simon, 'is no argument. And I don't blame any woman for using what means she's got. There are times when a woman's _got_ to forget herself.'
Kate said, 'I don't think a woman's _ever_ got to forget herself,' and there was a murmur of applause. Alix giggled. She wondered if social evenings at Violette were often like this.
'You don't understand,' said the round-faced girl helplessly. '_You_ may be all right, in your station of life, but you've got to look at other women's--the poor. We've got to do something about the poor. The vote would help us.'
'There have always,' said Mrs. Frampton, 'been the poor, and there always will be.'
'That's just why,' suggested Alix, momentarily joining in, 'it might be worth while to do something about them.' Miss Simon looked at her in sudden grat.i.tude; she had a misplaced and soon-quenched hope that this seemingly indifferent and amused girl might prove an ally.
Kate said, placidly, 'Well, they say that if you were to take a lot of men and women and give them all the same money, they'd all be quite different again to-morrow....'
Mrs. Frampton added that she went by the Bible. 'The poor ye shall have always with you.'
'Mrs. Frampton, it doesn't say that. And even if it did--well, it's as Miss Sandomir says, it's all the more reason for thinking about them.
Non-combatants and Others Part 7
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Non-combatants and Others Part 7 summary
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