The pity was that he forgot – not that he was of a forgetful
disposition in great matters; he was simply over-excited – he forgot to dazzle
them up until after he had fairly put his collar on and his necktie in a bow. It is
imprudent to touch blacking in a dress-shirt, so Denry had to undo the past and
begin again. This hurried him. He was not afraid of being late for the first waltz
with Miss Ruth Earp, but he was afraid of not being out of the house before his
mother returned. Mrs Machin had been making up a lady’s own materials all day,
naturally – the day being what it was! If she had had twelve hands instead of
two, she might have made up the own materials of half-a-dozen ladies instead of one,
and earned twenty-four shillings instead of four. Denry did not want his mother to
see him ere he departed. He had lavished an enormous amount of brains and energy to
the end of displaying himself in this refined and novel attire to the gaze of two
hundred persons, and yet his secret wish was to deprive his mother of the beautiful
spectacle.
However, she slipped in, with her bag
and her seamy fingers and her rather sardonic expression, at the very moment when
Denry was putting on his overcoat in the kitchen (there being insufficient room in
the passage). He did what he could to hide his shirt-front (though she knew all
about it), and failed.
‘Bless us!’ she exclaimed
briefly, going to the fire to warm her hands.
A harmless remark. But her tone seemed
to strip bare the vanity of human greatness.
‘I’m in
a hurry,’ said Denry, importantly, as if he was going forth to sign a treaty
involving the welfare of the nations.
‘Well,’ said she,
‘happen ye are, Denry. But th’ kitchen table’s no place for
boot-brushes.’
He had one piece of luck. It froze.
Therefore no anxiety about the condition of boots.
VI
The Countess was late; some trouble
with a horse. Happily the Earl had been in Bursley all day, and had dressed at the
Conservative Club; and his lordship had ordered that the programme of dances should
be begun. Denry learned this as soon as he emerged, effulgent, from the
gentlemen’s cloak-room into the broad red-carpeted corridor which runs from
end to end of the ground-floor of the Town Hall. Many important townspeople were
chatting in the corridor – the innumerable Swetnam family, the Stanways, the
great Etches, the Fearnses, Mrs Clayton Vernon, the Suttons, including Beatrice
Sutton. Of course everybody knew him for Duncalf’s shorthand clerk and the son
of the flannel-washer; but universal white kid gloves constitute a democracy, and
Shillitoe could put more style into a suit than any other tailor in the Five
Towns.
‘How do?’ the eldest of the
Swetnam boys nodded carelessly.
‘How do, Swetnam?’ said
Denry, with equal carelessness.
The thing was accomplished! That
greeting was like a Masonic initiation, and henceforward he was the peer of no
matter whom. At first he had thought that four hundred eyes would be fastened on
him, their glance saying, ‘This youth is wearing a dress-suit for the first
time, and it is not paid for, either!’ But it was not so. And the reason was
that the entire population of the Town Hall was heartily engaged in pretending that
never in its life had it been seen after seven o’clock of
a night apart from a dress-suit. Denry observed with joy that, while numerous
middle-aged and awkward men wore red or white silk handkerchiefs in their
waistcoats, such people as Charles Fearns, the Swetnams, and Harold Etches did not.
He was, then, in the shyness of his handkerchief, on the side of the angels.
He passed up the double staircase
(decorated with white or pale frocks of unparalleled richness), and so into the
grand hall. A scarlet orchestra was on the platform, and many people strolled about
the floor in attitudes of expectation. The walls were festooned with flowers. The
thrill of being magnificent seized him, and he was drenched in a vast desire to be
truly magnificent himself. He dreamt of magnificence and boot-brushes kept sticking
out of this dream like black mud out of snow. In his reverie he looked about for
Ruth Earp, but she was invisible. Then he went downstairs again, idly; gorgeously
feigning that he spent six evenings a week in ascending and descending monumental
staircases, appropriately clad. He was determined to be as sublime as anyone.
There was a stir in the corridor, and
the sublimest consented to be excited.
The Countess was announced to be
imminent. Everybody was grouped round the main portal, careless of temperatures. Six
times was the Countess announced to be imminent before she actually appeared,
expanding from the narrow gloom of her black carriage like a magic vision. Aldermen
received her – and they did not do it with any excess of gracefulness. They
seemed afraid of her, as though she was recovering from influenza and they feared to
catch it. She had precisely the same high voice, and precisely the same efficient
smile, as she had employed to Denry, and these instruments worked marvels on
aldermen; they were as melting as salt on snow.
1 comment