The Fountain Overflows (40 page)

Read The Fountain Overflows Online

Authors: Rebecca West

Tags: #Fiction, #Classics, #Coming of Age, #Family Life

We were off the bridge now, and turning round by Palace Yard. “That is where we would go in if I were a Member,” he said, and sighed. “But it is the Strangers’ Entrance for us.”

Papa showed the attendant at the door his press ticket and added that he had come to see a Member of the House of Commons, Mr. Oswald Pennington. The name was familiar to me, as many names were familiar to me in my childhood. He had been a great friend of my father’s for some months, then we heard no more of him, and if Mamma mentioned him Papa laughed contemptuously. No figure was continuously present in my father’s life except, strangely enough, the chirruping Mr. Langham, who certainly would not have been expected to stay the course. We went up the stairs, and then Papa said, “Stop, you must see this,” and I looked down for the first time on Westminster Hall. We had entered a Victorian building and had come on Shakespeare. The stone chamber was splendid like blank verse, the golden angels who held up the roof matched the poetry of earth with heavenly hymns, great embodiments of the passions had gone out a minute before, trailing their gold and crimson cloaks on the staircase that leads up the wall and into the end of the play. “We must hurry, we have business to do,” said Papa. “But you are right, there is nothing more beautiful in all the world, not in Paris, not in Rome. And nearly all that is worth calling political science came to being in that hall.”

We hurried along a corridor where there were many statues representing statesmen and many frescoes representing historical events, all in the spirit of a school play, while my father grumbled comments on the past sounding like curses and based on quite another conception of history than this innocent painting and sculpture. He suggested that in the hall we had seen fools and brutes, forced to this meeting by mutual treacheries; sometimes one snake had its head in the other’s mouth, and sometimes change about; under the pressure of reality each time they met they discovered some truth relating to the fundamental problem of politics, which was, he hoped I knew, what the state might ask of the individual, what the individual might ask of the state. The approximation to the truth thus attained was beautiful, but how unbeautiful the instrument of its discovery. Give them the chance, he grumbled, their foul hands would destroy the fair things they had made, half by accident. Even then I realized that a corridor decorated by sculptors and mural painters who adhered to my father’s conception of history would have been a most uncomfortable place.

We sat in the round central lobby for quite a long time after my father sent his name in to Mr. Pennington. It was like sitting in the midst of a tureen full of gravy soup. I was growing up at the end of an age which, partly by necessity and partly by choice, was very brown. In the towns chimneys poured out smoke from open fires and kitchen ranges, and light itself was permanently stained; and town-dwellers, who then so largely set the way of thinking, romanticized the obscurity to which they grew accustomed. Such sights as a narrow shaft of light struggling through a heavy mullioned window and laying a thread of sunlight over a broad dark passage aroused none of the impatience we would feel today, but rather a sense that here was something as acceptable as a succession of major chords or a properly scanned line of verse. The House of Commons was a supreme effort of brownness. I can remember looking at one such needle-broad shaft of sunlight that afternoon, struggling through an interior brown in itself, what with brown wood, brown paint, and brown upholstery, and made more brown because the struggling rays of defeated natural light were supplemented by the molasses of shaded gaslight. There passed through the opacity before us and the other suppliants waiting in the seat round the circular hall a number of men whom I remember as being far more corpulent than the mass of men today; and the older ones wore beards which seemed to be corpulent too. My father noted that a number of the younger men were clean shaven and said that when he first came to the House of Commons there was not a single man with a bare face on either side of the House. Some of these passers-by nodded to my father, a few stopped to greet him. Most of these, he told me, were Members of Parliament for Ulster constituencies. “Poor men, they will probably be betrayed,” he said. “They are loyal to the British Empire, but this is Judas’s holiday.” His head began to nod.

A man halted in front of us and looked down on my father and saw that he slept. His lips parted, he raised his eyebrows cynically, he swung his weight to his back foot. I knew he was saying to himself, “I never wanted to see this man, and since I have this unlooked-for opportunity to get away I might as well take it.” That would have been a cruel thing to do to my father, and to the schoolgirl who sat beside him. Yet Mr. Pennington did not look cruel. Abundant brown hair fell back from his forehead, a deep wave forcing itself forward in spite of brilliantine, and a fine moustache covered his handsomely curved upper lip; he had a clean bright skin; and his clothes were beautiful. He made the pleasant impression of a well-bred well-trained dog in good condition, wearing a handsome collar. A thought simple enough to have passed through a dog’s head made him wish to leave us to our troubles. Still, he did not give way to it. Something in my father’s sleeping face surprised him and aroused his curiosity, and he continued to look down on him.

I tugged at Papa’s coat, and he was on his feet at once, like a swordsman who feared ambush and went to sleep with his rapier in his hand. He greeted Mr. Pennington politely, introduced me and explained that he had brought me to this unsuitable place because he felt too ill to come alone, and then said, “I have not come to you for the reason you might fear.”

“Oh that,” said Mr. Pennington. He gave me a sideways glance, and then assumed a very amiable expression. It was evidently his theory that if he said something disagreeable to Papa and looked bluff and hearty when he said it, the meaning of his words would escape me. “It would be discourteous,” he said in a roistering way, “to say that it would have been quite useless if you had. Yet I am glad to see you after all this time. Upon my word, it is an extraordinary thing, I am almost as glad as I was during the first weeks of our acquaintance. A lot of people would think that impossible, after all that happened.”

My father seemed to be sadly remembering that in more favourable circumstances he might have let himself answer angrily. Then he looked disconcerted, as if he had been arguing with a friend over an arithmetical problem and had worked it out for himself and found that he was wrong. “You are of course quite right,” he said. “But I have nothing. Believe me, I have nothing.” Mr. Pennington nodded humourously, as if that were so well known it hardly needed to be repeated. But light was now shining on my father’s face. He was possessed by the cause which had brought him here.

He said, “I have come to see you about the Phillips case. I have some interest in it. Mrs. Phillips’s girl is at school with this daughter of mine here. When the woman went away my wife took in the Phillips girl and Mrs. Phillips’s sister, an excellent woman. The girl has now gone to a relative but the sister we still have with us.”

“Have you indeed?” said Mr. Pennington, dropping his affectation. “That’s very kind of you. That’s very kind of you indeed. I say, what extraordinary things happen to you, old man!”

“One does not read of murderers’ relatives sleeping in the street, though murders commonly destroy homes as well as lives,” said my father. “Somebody takes them in. So many people do what you call extraordinary things that you must be wrong in calling them extraordinary. You should remember that. But the point is this. You have seen that there is an outcry in the press against the way Queenie Phillips was tried, and a demand that she should be reprieved?”

“Yes, indeed,” said Mr. Pennington.

“I thought it would have come under your notice,” said Papa, “since you are a nephew of Mr. Brackenbird, and he is so conscientious a Home Secretary, and you have been seeing so much of him lately. Of late I have been reading the Court Circular in
The Times,
as attentively as if I were a general’s widow living in Bath.”

“Well, anyway,” said Mr. Pennington, who seemed displeased with the turn the conversation had taken, “there can’t be much hope of a reprieve. The woman was as guilty as Lucrezia Borgia.”

“Guiltier than that,” said Papa impatiently. I knew he would have liked to stop and explain that to class Lucrezia Borgia as a murderess was a vulgar error, unsupported by serious historians. But he continued, “I would ask you to consider that there are two separate strands in this agitation for Mrs. Phillips’s reprieve. Everything framed by the popular mind is impure. There are a number of imbeciles who believe that Mrs. Phillips did not poison her husband, that the nurse mixed up the medicines, and that the servants entered into a conspiracy to give false evidence against a mistress whom they detested. Of course, that is nonsense. But not entirely nonsense. The popular mind cannot even get its nonsense pure. For the servants did in fact detest Mrs. Phillips, and did in fact give perjured evidence against her till my blood ran cold, wondering what black outcrop of hell had produced the wretches. But there is another strand to the agitation. A number of people claim that Mrs. Phillips should be reprieved because she did not have a fair trial. That claim is justified. I sat in court with the woman’s sister from the moment she was brought into the dock till the moment she went down to the cells under sentence of death. She did not get a fair trial. Mr. Justice Ludost conducted the trial like a lunatic, because he is a lunatic. He interrupted the counsel for the defence times without number. He intervened to bully her witnesses. He interjected remarks designed to create a prejudice against her on issues not before the court. His summing-up presented her to the jury as a person to whom they did not need to do justice; and, even worse, he instructed the jury on matters of fact as well as matters of law. And this he did because he is as much a raving lunatic as any man in Bedlam today.”

“Oh, old Ludost!” sighed Mr. Pennington. “Such a brilliant man!”

“Why, how did you know that?” asked Papa.

“I’ve been told,” said Mr. Pennington, with great simplicity. “And, of course, the news about him not being himself is getting round. We’ve had that in my own constituency. He’s been round the Northern Circuit just lately, you know. My uncle was worried about that when it happened. He’s getting old, of course.”

“Age did not account for what happened at the Phillips trial,” said Papa. “Let me tell you what I heard and saw.”

“Oh, you needn’t trouble,” said Mr. Pennington. “I read it all in the papers.”

“What you read in the papers was not written by me,” said Papa. “I may have something to tell you which my inferiors could not. Wait here, Rose.”

He and Mr. Pennington walked to the centre of the great round lobby, and they stood for perhaps a quarter of an hour, while my father had his hand on the other’s arm, and, to my surprise, looked very calm as he told his story. When he talked to himself in the garden, his gestures were often wild and, if he paused to repeat a phrase, laughing with satisfaction, it seemed certain that it had satisfied him by its violence. But now the words were coming from him in a moderate flow, evidently adapted to Mr. Pennington’s more placid disposition; for Mr. Pennington, being the taller of the two, had bent his head down to hear better, and turned it sideways, so that I was able to watch his expression. Though he sometimes looked saddened by what my father said, he never looked incredulous, or as people often did when any member of our family told them something, as if we were taking it too hard. Papa had evidently found the right note for his audience. I sat in the middle of the huge tureen of gravy soup, and looked through its brown depths at my father as he saved Mrs. Phillips’s life, and thereby spared Aunt Lily and Nancy the shocking grief they feared, and I was lifted up by pride. I looked at the passers-by, who sometimes stared at me, surprised to see a schoolgirl sitting alone in a place where, at that time, there were few women. I gave them pitying glances, because they were not the children of my father.

At last they strolled back to the bench, Mr. Pennington saying gravely, “So that is how it was.”

“Yes,” said Papa, and suddenly he became more like his violent self, though he talked quietly through his teeth. “And it is the unanswerable argument for the establishment of a Court of Appeal. I cannot think why your uncle is so obstinately opposed to it. The conception of a judiciary independent of the executive is one of the main foundations of our liberties. But the flesh-and-blood figure of a judge who has free rein for his will stinks to heaven, because human flesh and blood stink and the human will stinks. We have the faculty of secreting political wisdom and voiding it in the form of systems exquisite in their logic and their pertinence to our needs. But we remain illogical and impertinent, so all our systems are realized in gross imperfection, since we have to operate them. So we build up the common law of England and we place the judge on his bench at the correct point of the constitution, but there comes a day when time and, I suspect, a stroke of misfortune convert a judge into a senile and enraged Pan, his goat-leg visible under his robe, his horns piercing his full-bottomed wig. It is ridiculous to make judges independent of all control. If we exempt a judge from political control we can still set a judge to catch a judge. Not one judge alone to correct another judge. Then you will have stinking flesh and blood and will rolling in the dust with stinking flesh and blood and will. You must have three judges acting together, so that each can think of the system, which he will do chiefly to abash the other, but which will nevertheless compel them to the proper service of the law. But you must know all about the scheme, your uncle has been so busy in blinding his eyes to these undoubted truths.”

“I say, what a chap you are!” protested Mr. Pennington. “You run on so. Nobody else thinks of this proposed Court of Appeal as you do. Even the strongest supporters of the scheme among the people I know in the House don’t think of it as you do. They simply think that a poor chap may come up before a judge that’s too old, or before a jury of fatheads, or has a lawyer that’s no good, and then in that case it’s only fair he should have another chance. And my uncle doesn’t agree with them. He says that one way of helping people is to keep them from committing crimes in the first place, and that one way of doing that is to make them respect the law, and that if you admit that judges can do wrong you weaken the respect for a very important part of the law. That’s how he sees it, and you’ve got to be practical, you know. That’s your weakness, isn’t it, old chap? You can’t say you’re practical, can you? I mean to say!”

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