Read A Family and a Fortune Online
Authors: Ivy Compton-Burnett
âOh, I am not as young as all that. A ripe thirty, and all my years lived to the full! I would not have missed out one of them. I don't rank myself with the callow young any longer.'
âAlways Father's little girl,' murmured Aubrey.
âWhat, my son?' said Edgar.
âI still rank myself with the young,' said Aubrey, as if repeating what he had said. âI think I had better until I go to school. Anything else would make me look silly, and Clement would not like me to look that.'
âGet on with your breakfast, little boy,' said Justine. âStraight on and not another word until you have finished.'
âI was making my little effort to keep the ball of conversation rolling. Every little counts.'
âSo it does, dear, and with all our hearts we acknowledge it.'
Blanche smiled from her eldest to her youngest child in appreciation of their feeling.
âAubrey meets with continual success,' said Mark. âHe is indeed a kind of success in himself.'
âWhat kind?' said Clement.
âToo simple, Clement,' said Justine, shaking her head. âHow did you sleep, Uncle?'
âVery well until I was awakened by the rain. Then I went to the window and stood looking out into the night. I see now that people really do that.'
âThey really shut out the air,' said Clement.
âIs Clement a soured young man?' said Aubrey.
âI had a very bad night,' said Blanche, in a mild, conversational tone, without complaint that no enquiry had been made of her. âI have almost forgotten what it is to have a good one.'
âPoor little Mother! But you sleep in the afternoon,' said Justine.
âI never do. I have my rest, of course; I could not get on
without it. But I never sleep. I may close my eyes to ease them, but I am always awake.'
âYou were snoring yesterday, Mother,' said Justine, with the insistence upon people's sleeping and giving this sign which seems to be a human characteristic.
âNo, I was not,' said Blanche, with the annoyance at the course, which is unfortunately another. âI never snore even at night, so I certainly do not when I am just resting in the day.'
âMother, I tiptoed in and you did not give a sign.'
âIf you made no sound, and I was resting my eyes, I may not have heard you, of course.'
âAnyhow a few minutes in the day do not make up for a bad night,' said Mark.
âBut I do not sleep in the day, even for a few minutes,' said his mother in a shriller tone. âI don't know what to say to make you all understand.'
âI don't know why people mind admitting to a few minutes' sleep in the day,' said Dudley, âwhen we all acknowledge hours at night and indeed require compassion if we do not have them.'
âWho has acknowledged them?' said Clement. âIt will appear that as a family we do without sleep.'
âBut I do not mind admitting to them,' said Blanche. âWhat I mean is that it is not the truth. There is no point in not speaking the truth even about a trivial matter.'
âI do not describe insomnia in that way,' said Mark.
âDear boy, you do understand,' said Blanche, holding out her hand with an almost wild air. âYou do prevent my feeling quite alone.'
âCome, come, Mother, I was tactless, I admit,' said Justine. âI know people hate confessing that they sleep in the day. I ought to have remembered it.'
âJustine now shows tact,' murmured Aubrey.
âIt is possible - it seems to be possible,' said Edgar, âto be resting with closed eyes and give the impression of sleep.'
âYou forget the snoring, Father,' said Justine, in a voice so low and light as to escape her mother's ears.
âIf you don't forget it too, I don't know what we are to do,' said Mark, in the same manner.
âSnoring is not proof of being asleep,' said Dudley.
âBut I was not snoring,' said Blanche, in the easier tone of one losing grasp of a situation. âI should have known it myself. It would not be possible to be awake and make a noise and not hear it.'
Justine gave an arch look at anyone who would receive it, Edgar did so as a duty and rapidly withdrew his eyes as another.
âWhy do we not learn that no one ever snores under any circumstances?' said Clement.
âI wonder how the idea of snoring arose,' said Mark.
âMother, are you going to eat no more than that?' said Justine. âYou are not ashamed of eating as well as of sleeping, I hope.'
âThere has been no question of sleeping. And I am not ashamed of either. I always eat very well and I always sleep very badly. There is no connexion between them.'
âYou seem to be making an exception in the first matter today,' said her husband.
âWell, it upsets me to be contradicted, Edgar, and told that I do things when I don't do them, and when I know quite well what I do, myself,' said Blanche, almost flouncing in her chair.
âIt certainly does, Mother dear. So we will leave it at that; that you know quite well what you do yourself.'
âIt seems a reasonable conclusion,' said Mark.
âI believe people always know that best,' said Dudley. âIf we could see ourselves as others see us, we should be much more misled, though people always talk as if we ought to try to do it.'
âThey want us to be misled and cruelly,' said his nephew.
âI don't know,' said Justine. âWe might often meet a good, sound, impartial judgement.'
âAnd we know, when we have one described like that, what a dreadful judgement it is,' said her uncle.
âHalf the truth, the blackest of lies,' said Mark.
âThe whitest of lies really,' said Clement. âOr there is no such thing as a white lie.'
âWell, there is not,' said his sister. âTruth is truth and a lie is a lie.'
âWhat is Truth?' said Aubrey. âHas Justine told us?'
âTruth is whatever happens to be true under the circumstances,' said his sister, doing so at the moment. âWe ought not to mind a searchlight being turned on our inner selves, if we are honest about them.'
âThat is our reason,' said Mark. â“Know thyself” is a most superfluous direction. We can't avoid it.'
âWe can only hope that no one else knows,' said Dudley.
âUncle, what nonsense!' said Justine. âYou are the most transparent and genuine person, the very last to say that.'
âWhat do you all really mean?' said Edgar, speaking rather hurriedly, as if to check any further personal description.
âI think I only mean', said his brother, âthat human beings ought always to be judged very tenderly, and that no one will be as tender as themselves. “Remember what you owe to yourself” is another piece of superfluous advice.'
âBut better than most advice,' said Aubrey, lowering his voice as he ended. âMore tender.'
âNow, little boy, hurry up with your breakfast,' said Justine. âMr Penrose will be here in a few minutes.'
âTo pursue his life work of improving Aubrey,' said Clement.
âClement ought to have ended with a sigh,' said Aubrey. âBut I daresay the work has its own unexpected rewards.'
âI forget what I learned at Eton,' said his uncle.
âYes, so do I; yes, so to a great extent do I,' said Edgar. âYes, I believe I forgot the greater part of it.'
âYou can't really have lost it, Father,' said Justine. âAn education in the greatest school in the world must have left its trace. It must have contributed to your forming.'
âIt does not seem to matter that I can't go to school,' said Aubrey. âIt will be a shorter cut to the same end.'
âNow, little boy, don't take that obvious line. And remember that self-education is the greatest school of all.'
âAnd education by Penrose? What is that?'
âSay Mr Penrose. And get on with your breakfast,'
âHe has only had one piece of toast,' said Blanche, in a tone which suggested that it would be one of despair if the situation were not familiar. âAnd he is a growing boy.'
âI should not describe him in those terms,' said Mark.
âI should be at a loss to describe him,' said Clement.
âDon't be silly,' said their mother at once. âYou are both of you just as difficult to describe.'
âSome people defy description,' said Aubrey. âUncle and I are among them.'
âThere is something in it,' said Justine, looking round.
âPerhaps we should not â it may be as well not to discuss people who are present,' said Edgar.
âRight as usual, Father. I wish the boys would emulate you.'
âOh, I think they do, dear,' said Blanche, in an automatic tone. âI see a great likeness in them both to their father. It gets more striking.'
âAnd does no one think poor Uncle a worthy object of emulation? He is as experienced and polished a person as Father.'
Edgar looked up at this swift disregard of accepted advice.
âI am a changeling,' said Dudley. âAubrey and I are very hard to get hold of.'
âAnd you can't send a person you can't put your finger on to school,' said his nephew.
âYou can see that he does the next best thing,' said Justine. âOff with you at once. There is Mr Penrose on the steps. Don't keep the poor little man waiting.'
âJustine refers to every other person as poor,' said Clement.
âWell, I am not quite without the bowels of human compassion. The ups and downs of the world do strike me, I confess.'
âChiefly the downs.'
âWell, there are more of them.'
âPoor little man,' murmured Aubrey, leaving his seat. âWhose little man is he? I am Justine's little boy.'
âIt seems - is it not rather soon after breakfast to work?' said Edgar.
âThey go for a walk first, as you know, Father. It is good for Aubrey to have a little adult conversation apart from his family. I asked Mr Penrose to make the talk educational.
âDid you, dear?' said Blanche, contracting her eyes. âI think you should leave that kind of thing to Father or me.'
âIndeed I should not, Mother. And not have it done at all? That would be a nice alternative. I should do all I can for you all, as it comes into my head, as I always have and always shall. Don't try to prevent what is useful and right.'
Blanche subsided under this reasonable direction.
âNow off with you both! Off to your occupations,' said Justine, waving her hand towards her brothers. âI hope you have some. I have, and they will not wait.'
âI am glad I have none,' said Dudley. âI could not bear to have regular employment.'
âDo you know what I have discovered?' said his niece. âI have discovered a likeness between our little boy and you, Uncle. A real, incontrovertible and bona fide likeness. It is no good for you all to open your eyes. I have made my discovery and will stick to it.'
âI have always thought they were alike,' said Blanche.
âOh, now, Mother, that is not at all on the line. You know it has only occurred to you at this moment.'
âNo, I am bound to say', said Edgar, definite in the interests of justice, âthat I have heard your mother point out a resemblance.'
âThen dear little Mother, she has got in first, and I am the last person to grudge her the credit. So you see it, Mother? Because I am certain of it, certain. I should almost have thought that Uncle would see it himself.'
âWe can hardly expect him to call attention to it,' said Clement.
âI am aware of it,' said Dudley, âand I invite the attention of you all.'
âThen I am a laggard and see things last instead of first.
âBut I am none the less interested in them. My interest does not depend upon personal triumph. It is a much more genuine and independent thing.'
âMine is feebler, I admit,' said Mark.
âNow, Mother, you will have a rest this morning to make up for your poor night. And I will drive the house on its course. You can be quite at ease.'
Justine put her hand against her mother's cheek, and Blanche lifted her own hand and held it for a moment, smiling at her daughter.
âWhat a dear, good girl she is!' she said, as the latter left them. âWhat should we do without her?'
âWhat we do now,' said Clement.
âIndeed we should not,' said his mother, rounding on him at once. âWe should find everything entirely different, as you know quite well.'
âIndeed, indeed,' said Edgar in a deliberate voice. âIndeed.'
Edgar and Blanche had fallen in love thirty-one years before, in the year eighteen hundred and seventy, when Edgar was twenty-four and Blanche thirty; and now that the feeling was a memory, and a rare and even embarrassing one, Blanche regarded her husband with trust and pride, and Edgar his wife with compassionate affection. It meant little that neither was ever disloyal to the other, for neither was capable of disloyalty. They had come to be rather shy of each other and were little together by day or night. It was hard to imagine how their shyness had ever been enough in abeyance to allow of their courtship and marriage, and they found it especially the case. They could only remember, and this they did as seldom as they could. Blanche seemed to wander aloof through her life, finding enough to live for in the members of her family and in her sense of pride and possession in each, it was typical of her that she regarded Dudley as a brother, and had no jealousy of her husband's relation with him.
Edgar's life was largely in his brother and the friendship which dated from their infancy. Mark helped his father in his halting and efficient management of the estate, and as the eldest son had been given no profession. Clement had
gained a fellowship at Cambridge with a view to being a scholar and a don. Each brother had a faint compassion and contempt for the other's employment and prospect.
âMother dear,' said Justine, returning to the room, âhere is a letter which came for you last night and which you have not opened. There is a way to discharge your duties! I suggest that you remedy the omission.'