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Howards End by E. M. Forster CHAPTER 30
Tibby was now approaching his last year at Oxford.
He had moved out of college, and was contemplating the Universe, or such
portions of it as concerned him, from his comfortable lodgings in Long Wall.
He was not concerned with much.
When a young man is untroubled by passions and sincerely indifferent to public
opinion, his outlook is necessarily limited.
Tibby neither wished to strengthen the position of the rich nor to improve that of
the poor, and so was well content to watch the elms nodding behind the mildly
embattled parapets of Magdalen.
There are worse lives. Though selfish, he was never cruel; though
affected in manner, he never posed.
Like Margaret, he disdained the heroic equipment, and it was only after many
visits that men discovered Schlegel to possess a character and a brain.
He had done well in Mods, much to the surprise of those who attended lectures and
took proper exercise, and was now glancing disdainfully at Chinese in case he should
some day consent to qualify as a Student Interpreter.
To him thus employed Helen entered. A telegram had preceded her.
He noticed, in a distant way, that his sister had altered.
As a rule he found her too pronounced, and had never come across this look of appeal,
pathetic yet dignified--the look of a sailor who has lost everything at sea.
"I have come from Oniton," she began.
"There has been a great deal of trouble there."
"Who's for lunch?" said Tibby, picking up the claret, which was warming in the
hearth.
Helen sat down submissively at the table. "Why such an early start?" he asked.
"Sunrise or something--when I could get away."
"So I surmise. Why?"
"I don't know what's to be done, Tibby. I am very much upset at a piece of news
that concerns Meg, and do not want to face her, and I am not going back to Wickham
Place.
I stopped here to tell you this." The landlady came in with the cutlets.
Tibby put a marker in the leaves of his Chinese Grammar and helped them.
Oxford--the Oxford of the vacation--dreamed and rustled outside, and indoors the little
fire was coated with grey where the sunshine touched it.
Helen continued her odd story.
"Give Meg my love and say that I want to be alone.
I mean to go to Munich or else Bonn." "Such a message is easily given," said her
brother.
"As regards Wickham Place and my share of the furniture, you and she are to do
exactly as you like. My own feeling is that everything may just
as well be sold.
What does one want with dusty economic, books, which have made the world no better,
or with mother's hideous chiffoniers? I have also another commission for you.
I want you to deliver a letter."
She got up. "I haven't written it yet.
Why shouldn't I post it, though?" She sat down again.
"My head is rather wretched.
I hope that none of your friends are likely to come in."
Tibby locked the door. His friends often found it in this
condition.
Then he asked whether anything had gone wrong at Evie's wedding.
"Not there," said Helen, and burst into tears.
He had known her hysterical--it was one of her aspects with which he had no concern--
and yet these tears touched him as something unusual.
They were nearer the things that did concern him, such as music.
He laid down his knife and looked at her curiously.
Then, as she continued to sob, he went on with his lunch.
The time came for the second course, and she was still crying.
Apple Charlotte was to follow, which spoils by waiting.
"Do you mind Mrs. Martlett coming in?" he asked, "or shall I take it from her at the
door?"
"Could I bathe my eyes, Tibby?" He took her to his bedroom, and introduced
the pudding in her absence. Having helped himself, he put it down to
warm in the hearth.
His hand stretched towards the Grammar, and soon he was turning over the pages, raising
his eyebrows scornfully, perhaps at human nature, perhaps at Chinese.
To him thus employed Helen returned.
She had pulled herself together, but the grave appeal had not vanished from her
eyes. "Now for the explanation," she said.
"Why didn't I begin with it?
I have found out something about Mr. Wilcox.
He has behaved very wrongly indeed, and ruined two people's lives.
It all came on me very suddenly last night; I am very much upset, and I do not know
what to do. Mrs. Bast--"
"Oh, those people!"
Helen seemed silenced. "Shall I lock the door again?"
"No, thanks, Tibbikins. You're being very good to me.
I want to tell you the story before I go abroad.
You must do exactly what you like--treat it as part of the furniture.
Meg cannot have heard it yet, I think.
But I cannot face her and tell her that the man she is going to marry has misconducted
himself. I don't even know whether she ought to be
told.
Knowing as she does that I dislike him, she will suspect me, and think that I want to
ruin her match. I simply don't know what to make of such a
thing.
I trust your judgment. What would you do?"
"I gather he has had a mistress," said Tibby.
Helen flushed with shame and anger.
"And ruined two people's lives. And goes about saying that personal actions
count for nothing, and there always will be rich and poor.
He met her when he was trying to get rich out in Cyprus--I don't wish to make him
worse than he is, and no doubt she was ready enough to meet him.
But there it is.
They met. He goes his way and she goes hers.
What do you suppose is the end of such women?"
He conceded that it was a bad business.
"They end in two ways: Either they sink till the lunatic asylums and the workhouses
are full of them, and cause Mr. Wilcox to write letters to the papers complaining of
our national degeneracy, or else they
entrap a boy into marriage before it is too late.
She--I can't blame her.
"But this isn't all," she continued after a long pause, during which the landlady
served them with coffee. "I come now to the business that took us to
Oniton.
We went all three. Acting on Mr. Wilcox's advice, the man
throws up a secure situation and takes an insecure one, from which he is dismissed.
There are certain excuses, but in the main Mr. Wilcox is to blame, as Meg herself
admitted. It is only common justice that he should
employ the man himself.
But he meets the woman, and, like the cur that he is, he refuses, and tries to get
rid of them. He makes Meg write.
Two notes came from her late that evening-- one for me, one for Leonard, dismissing him
with barely a reason. I couldn't understand.
Then it comes out that Mrs. Bast had spoken to Mr. Wilcox on the lawn while we left her
to get rooms, and was still speaking about him when Leonard came back to her.
This Leonard knew all along.
He thought it natural he should be ruined twice.
Natural! Could you have contained yourself?.
"It is certainly a very bad business," said Tibby.
His reply seemed to calm his sister. "I was afraid that I saw it out of
proportion.
But you are right outside it, and you must know.
In a day or two--or perhaps a week--take whatever steps you think fit.
I leave it in your hands."
She concluded her charge.
"The facts as they touch Meg are all before you," she added; and Tibby sighed and felt
it rather hard that, because of his open mind, he should be empanelled to serve as a
juror.
He had never been interested in human beings, for which one must blame him, but
he had had rather too much of them at Wickham Place.
Just as some people cease to attend when books are mentioned, so Tibby's attention
wandered when "personal relations" came under discussion.
Ought Margaret to know what Helen knew the Basts to know?
Similar questions had vexed him from infancy, and at Oxford he had learned to
say that the importance of human beings has been vastly overrated by specialists.
The epigram, with its faint whiff of the eighties, meant nothing.
But he might have let it off now if his sister had not been ceaselessly beautiful.
"You see, Helen--have a cigarette--I don't see what I'm to do."
"Then there's nothing to be done. I dare say you are right.
Let them marry.
There remains the question of compensation."
"Do you want me to adjudicate that too? Had you not better consult an expert?"
"This part is in confidence," said Helen.
"It has nothing to do with Meg, and do not mention it to her.
The compensation--I do not see who is to pay it if I don't, and I have already
decided on the minimum sum.
As soon as possible I am placing it to your account, and when I am in Germany you will
pay it over for me. I shall never forget your kindness,
Tibbikins, if you do this."
"What is the sum?" "Five thousand."
"Good God alive!" said Tibby, and went crimson.
"Now, what is the good of driblets?
To go through life having done one thing-- to have raised one person from the abyss:
not these puny gifts of shillings and blankets--making the grey more grey.
No doubt people will think me extraordinary."
"I don't care a damn what people think!" cried he, heated to unusual manliness of
diction.
"But it's half what you have." "Not nearly half."
She spread out her hands over her soiled skirt.
"I have far too much, and we settled at Chelsea last spring that three hundred a
year is necessary to set a man on his feet. What I give will bring in a hundred and
fifty between two.
It isn't enough." He could not recover.
He was not angry or even shocked, and he saw that Helen would still have plenty to
live on.
But it amazed him to think what haycocks people can make of their lives.
His delicate intonations would not work, and he could only blurt out that the five
thousand pounds would mean a great deal of bother for him personally.
"I didn't expect you to understand me."
"I? I understand nobody." "But you'll do it?"
"Apparently." "I leave you two commissions, then.
The first concerns Mr. Wilcox, and you are to use your discretion.
The second concerns the money, and is to be mentioned to no one, and carried out
literally.
You will send a hundred pounds on account tomorrow."
He walked with her to the station, passing through those streets whose serried beauty
never bewildered him and never fatigued.
The lovely creature raised domes and spires into the cloudless blue, and only the
ganglion of vulgarity round Carfax showed how evanescent was the phantom, how faint
its claim to represent England.
Helen, rehearsing her commission, noticed nothing: the Basts were in her brain, and
she retold the crisis in a meditative way, which might have made other men curious.
She was seeing whether it would hold.
He asked her once why she had taken the Basts right into the heart of Evie's
wedding. She stopped like a frightened animal and
said, "Does that seem to you so odd?"
Her eyes, the hand laid on the mouth, quite haunted him, until they were absorbed into
the figure of St. Mary the ***, before whom he paused for a moment on the walk
home.
It is convenient to follow him in the discharge of his duties.
Margaret summoned him the next day.
She was terrified at Helen's flight, and he had to say that she had called in at
Oxford. Then she said: "Did she seem worried at any
rumour about Henry?"
He answered, "Yes." "I knew it was that!" she exclaimed.
"I'll write to her." Tibby was relieved.
He then sent the cheque to the address that Helen gave him, and stated that later on he
was instructed to forward five thousand pounds.
An answer came back, very civil and quiet in tone--such an answer as Tibby himself
would have given.
The cheque was returned, the legacy refused, the writer being in no need of
money.
Tibby forwarded this to Helen, adding in the fulness of his heart that Leonard Bast
seemed somewhat a monumental person after all.
Helen's reply was frantic.
He was to take no notice. He was to go down at once and say that she
commanded acceptance. He went.
A scurf of books and china ornaments awaited them.
The Basts had just been evicted for not paying their rent, and had wandered no one
knew whither.
Helen had begun bungling with her money by this time, and had even sold out her shares
in the Nottingham and Derby Railway. For some weeks she did nothing.
Then she reinvested, and, owing to the good advice of her stockbrokers, became rather
richer than she had been before.