“They must have been good friends at heart;” she resumed;
“because she used to sing his songs。 Ah; how did
it go?” and Mrs。 Hilbery; who had a very sweet voice;
trolled out a famous lyric of her father’s which had been
set to an absurdly and charmingly sentimental air by some
early Victorian poser。
“It’s the vitality of them!” she concluded; striking her
fist against the table。 “That’s what we haven’t got! We’re
virtuous; we’re earnest; we go to meetings; we pay the
poor their wages; but we don’t live as they lived。 As often
as not; my father wasn’t in bed three nights out of the
seven; but always fresh as paint in the morning。 I hear
him now; e singing up the stairs to the nursery; and
tossing the loaf for breakfast on his swordstick; and then
off we went for a day’s pleasuring—Richmond; Hampton
Court; the Surrey Hills。 Why shouldn’t we go; Katharine?
It’s going to be a fine day。”
At this moment; just as Mrs。 Hilbery was examining the
weather from the window; there was a knock at the door。
99
Night and Day
A slight; elderly lady came in; and was saluted by
Katharine; with very evident dismay; as “Aunt Celia!” She
was dismayed because she guessed why Aunt Celia had
e。 It was certainly in order to discuss the case of Cyril
and the woman who was not his wife; and owing to her
procrastination Mrs。 Hilbery was quite unprepared。 Who
could be more unprepared? Here she was; suggesting that
all three of them should go on a jaunt to Blackfriars to
inspect the site of Shakespeare’s theater; for the weather
was hardly settled enough for the country。
To this proposal Mrs。 Milvain listened with a patient
smile; which indicated that for many years she had accepted
such eccentricities in her sisterinlaw with bland
philosophy。 Katharine took up her position at some distance;
standing with her foot on the fender; as though by
so doing she could get a better view of the matter。 But;
in spite of her aunt’s presence; how unreal the whole
question of Cyril and his morality appeared! The difficulty;
it now seemed; was not to break the news gently to
Mrs。 Hilbery; but to make her understand it。 How was one
to lasso her mind; and tether it to this minute; unimpor
tant spot? A matteroffact statement seemed best。
“I think Aunt Celia has e to talk about Cyril; mother;”
she said rather brutally。 “Aunt Celia has discovered that
Cyril is married。 He has a wife and children。”
“No; he is not married;” Mrs。 Milvain interposed; in low
tones; addressing herself to Mrs。 Hilbery。 “He has two
children; and another on the way。”
Mrs。 Hilbery looked from one to the other in bewilderment。
“We thought it better to wait until it was proved before
we told you;” Katharine added。
“But I met Cyril only a fortnight ago at the National
Gallery!” Mrs。 Hilbery exclaimed。 “I don’t believe a word
of it;” and she tossed her head with a smile on her lips at
Mrs。 Milvain; as though she could quite understand her
mistake; which was a very natural mistake; in the case of
a childless woman; whose husband was something very
dull in the Board of Trade。
“I didn’t wish to believe it; Maggie;” said Mrs。 Milvain。
“For a long time I couldn’t believe it。 But now I’ve seen;
and I have to believe it。”
100
Virginia Woolf
“Katharine;” Mrs。 Hilbery demanded; “does your father
know of this?”
Katharine nodded。
“Cyril married!” Mrs。 Hilbery repeated。 “And never telling
us a word; though we’ve had him in our house since he was
a child—noble William’s son! I can’t believe my ears!”
Feeling that the burden of proof was laid upon her; Mrs。
Milvain now proceeded with her story。 She was elderly
and fragile; but her childlessness seemed always to impose
these painful duties on her; and to revere the family;
and to keep it in repair; had now bee the chief
object of her life。 She told her story in a low; spasmodic;
and somewhat broken voice。
“I have suspected for some time that he was not happy。
There were new lines on his face。 So I went to his rooms;
when I knew he was engaged at the poor men’s college。
He lectures there—Roman law; you know; or it may be
Greek。 The landlady said Mr。 Alardyce only slept there
about once a fortnight now。 He looked so ill; she said。
She had seen him with a young person。 I suspected something
directly。 I went to his room; and there was an en
velope on the mantelpiece; and a letter with an address
in Seton Street; off the Kennington Road。”
Mrs。 Hilbery fidgeted rather restlessly; and hummed fragments
of her tune; as if to interrupt。
“I went to Seton Street;” Aunt Celia continued firmly。
“A very low place—lodginghouses; you know; with canaries
in the window。 Number seven just like all the others。
I rang; I knocked; no one came。 I went down the
area。 I am certain I saw some one inside—children—a
cradle。 But no reply—no reply。” She sighed; and looked
straight in front of her with a glazed expression in her
halfveiled blue eyes。
“I stood in the street;” she resumed; “in case I could
catch a sight of one of them。 It seemed a very long time。
There were rough men singing in the publichouse round
the corner。 At last the door opened; and some one—it
must have been the woman herself—came right past me。
There was only the pillarbox between us。”
“And what did she look like?” Mrs。 Hilbery demanded。
“One could see how the poor boy had been deluded;” was
all that Mrs。 Milvain vouchsafed by way of description。
101
Night and Day
“Poor thing!” Mrs。 Hilbery exclaimed。
“Poor Cyril!” Mrs。 Milvain said; laying a slight emphasis
upon Cyril。
“But they’ve got nothing to live upon;” Mrs。 Hilbery
continued。 “If he’d e to us like a man;” she went on;
“and said; ‘I’ve been a fool;’ one would have pitied him;
one would have tried to help him。 There’s nothing so
disgraceful after all— But he’s been going about all these
years; pretending; letting one take it for granted; that he
was single。 And the poor deserted little wife—”
“She is not his wife;” Aunt Celia interrupted。
“I’ve never heard anything so detestable!” Mrs。 Hilbery
wound up; striking her fist on the arm of her chair。 As she
realized the facts she became thoroughly disgusted; although;
perhaps; she was more hurt by the concealment
of the sin than by the sin itself。 She looked splendidly
roused and indignant; and Katharine felt an immense relief
and pride in her mother。 It was plain that her indignation
was very genuine; and that her mind was as perfectly
focused upon the facts as any one could wish—
more so; by a long way; than Aunt Celia’s mind; which
seemed to be timidly circling; with a morbid pleasure; in
these unpleasant shades。 She and her mother together
would take the situation in hand; visit Cyril; and see the
whole thing through。
“We must realize Cyril’s point of view first;” she said;
speaking directly to her mother; as if to a contemporary;
but before the words were out of her mouth; there was
more confusion outside; and Cousin Caroline; Mrs。 Hilbery’s
maiden cousin; entered the room。 Although she was by
birth an Alardyce; and Aunt Celia a Hilbery; the plexities
of the family relationship were such that each was at
once first and second cousin to the other; and thus aunt
and cousin to the culprit Cyril; so that his misbehavior
was almost as much Cousin Caroline’s affair as Aunt Celia’s。
Cousin Caroline was a lady of very imposing height and
circumference; but in spite of her size and her handsome
trappings; there was something exposed and unsheltered
in her expression; as if for many summers her thin red
skin and hooked nose and reduplication of chins; so much
resembling the profile of a cockatoo; had been bared to
the weather; she was; indeed; a single lady; but she had;
102
Virginia Woolf
it was the habit to say; “made a life for herself;” and was
thus entitled to be heard with respect。
“This unhappy business;” she began; out of breath as
she was。 “If the train had not gone out of the station just
as I arrived; I should have been with you before。 Celia
has doubtless told you。 You will agree with me; Maggie。
He must be made to marry her at once for the sake of the
children—”
“But does he refuse to marry her?” Mrs。 Hilbery inquired;
with a return of her bewilderment。
“He has written an absurd perverted letter; all quotations;”
Cousin Caroline puffed。 “He thinks he’s doing a very
fine thing; where we only see the folly of it… 。 The girl’s
every bit as infatuated as he is—for which I blame him。”
“She entangled him;” Aunt Celia intervened; with a very
curious smoothness of intonation; which seemed to convey
a vision of threads weaving and interweaving a close;
white mesh round their victim。
“It’s no use going into the rights and wrongs of the
affair now; Celia;” said Cousin Caroline with some acerbity;
for she believed herself the only practical one of the
family; and r
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