Chips stayed on
alone at Wasdale Head, where he boarded in a small farmhouse.
One day, climbing on Great Gable, he noticed a girl waving excitedly from
a dangerous-looking ledge. Thinking she was in difficulties, he hastened
toward her, but in doing so slipped himself and wrenched his ankle. As it
turned out, she was not in difficulties at all, but was merely signaling to a
friend farther down the mountain; she was an expert climber, better even than
Chips, who was pretty good. Thus he found himself the rescued instead of the
rescuer; and neither role was one for which he had much relish. For he did
not, he would have said, care for women; he never felt at home or at ease
with them; and that monstrous creature beginning to be talked about, the New
Woman of the nineties, filled him with horror. He was a quiet, conventional
person, and the world, viewed from the haven of Brookfield, seemed to him
full of distasteful innovations; there was a fellow named Bernard Shaw who
had the strangest and most reprehensible opinions; there was Ibsen, too, with
his disturbing plays; and there was this new craze for bicycling which was
being taken up by women equally with men. Chips did not hold with all this
modern newness and freedom. He had a vague notion, if he ever formulated it,
that nice women were weak, timid, and delicate, and that nice men treated
them with a polite but rather distant chivalry. He had not, therefore,
expected to find a woman on Great Gable; but, having encountered one who
seemed to need masculine help, it was even more terrifying that she should
turn the tables by helping him. For she did. She and her friend had to. He
could scarcely walk, and it was a hard job getting him down the steep track
to Wasdale.
Her name was Katherine Bridges; she was twenty-five—young enough to
be Chips’s daughter. She had blue, flashing eyes and freckled cheeks and
smooth straw-colored hair. She too was staying at a farm, on holiday with a
girl friend, and as she considered herself responsible for Chips’s accident,
she used to bicycle along the side of the lake to the house in which the
quiet, middle-aged, serious-looking man lay resting.
That was how she thought of him at first. And he, because she rode a
bicycle and was unafraid to visit a man alone in a farmhouse sitting room,
wondered vaguely what the world was coming to. His sprain put him at her
mercy, and it was soon revealed to him how much he might need that mercy. She
was a governess out of a job, with a little money saved up; she read and
admired Ibsen; she believed that women ought to be admitted to the
universities; she even thought they ought to have a vote. In politics she was
a radical, with leanings toward the views of people like Bernard Shaw and
William Morris. All her ideas and opinions she poured out to Chips during
those summer afternoons at Wasdale Head; and he, because he was not very
articulate, did not at first think it worth while to contradict them. Her
friend went away, but she stayed; what COULD you do with such a person, Chips
thought. He used to hobble with sticks along a footpath leading to the tiny
church; there was a stone slab on the wall, and it was comfortable to sit
down, facing the sunlight and the green-brown majesty of the Gable and
listening to the chatter of—well, yes, Chips had to admit it— a
very beautiful girl.
He had never met anyone like her. He had always thought that the modern
type, this “new woman” business, would repel him; and here she was, making
him positively look forward to the glimpse of her safety bicycle careering
along the lakeside road. And she, too, had never met anyone like HIM. She had
always thought that middle-aged men who read the Times and disapproved of
modernity were terrible bores; yet here he was, claiming her interest and
attention far more than youths of her own age. She liked him, initially,
because he was so hard to get to know, because he had gentle and quiet
manners, because his opinions dated from those utterly impossible seventies
and eighties and even earlier—yet were, for all that, so thoroughly
honest; and because—because his eyes were brown and he looked charming
when he smiled. “Of course, _I_ shall call you Chips, too,” she said, when
she learned that was his nickname at school.
Within a week they were head over heels in love; before Chips could walk
without a stick, they considered themselves engaged; and they were married in
London a week before the beginning of the autumn term.
When Chips, dreaming through the hours at Mrs. Wickett’s,
recollected those days, he used to look down at his feet and wonder which one
it was that had performed so signal a service. That, the trivial cause of so
many momentous happenings, was the one thing of which details evaded him. But
he resaw the glorious hump of the Gable (he had never visited the Lake
District since), and the mouse-gray depths of Wastwater under the Screes; he
could resmell the washed air after heavy rain, and refollow the ribbon of the
pass across to Sty Head. So clearly it lingered, that time of dizzy
happiness, those evening strolls by the waterside, her cool voice and her gay
laughter.
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