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    The Professor's House

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    certainly deserved more than one reading. He used to carry them out to

      the lake to read them over again. After coming out of the water he would

      lie on the sand, holding them in his hand, but somehow never taking his

      eyes off the pine-trees, appliqu�ed against the blue water, and their

      ripe yellow cones, dripping with gum and clustering on the pointed tips

      like a mass of golden bees in swarming-time. Usually he carried his

      letters home unread.

      His family wrote constantly about their plans for next summer, when they

      were going to take him over with them. Next summer? The Professor

      wondered...Sometimes he thought he would like to drive up in front of

      Notre Dame, in Paris, again, and see it standing there like the Rock of

      Ages, with the frail generation breaking about its base. He hadn't seen

      it since the war.

      But if he went anywhere next summer, he thought it would be down into

      Outland's country, to watch the sunrise break on sculptured peaks and

      impassable mountain passes--to look off at those long, rugged, untamed

      vistas dear to the American heart. Dear to all hearts, probably--at

      least, calling to all. Else why had his grandfather's grandfather, who

      had tramped so many miles across Europe into Russia with the Grande

      Arm�e, come out to the Canadian wilderness to forget the chagrin of his

      Emperor's defeat?

      Chapter 4

      The fall term of the university opened, and now the Professor went to

      his lectures instead of to the lake. He supposed he did his work, he

      heard no complaints from his assistants, and the students seemed

      interested. He found, however, that he wasn't willing to take the

      trouble to learn the names of several hundred new students. It wasn't

      worth while. He felt that his relations with them would be of short

      duration.

      The McGregors got home from their vacation in Oregon, and Scott was much

      amused to find the Professor so doggedly anchored in the old house.

      "It never struck me, Doctor, that you were a man who would be keeping up

      two establishments. They'll be coming home pretty soon, and then you'll

      have to decide where you are going to live."

      "I can't leave my study, Scott. That's flat."

      "Don't then! Darn it, you've a right to two houses if you want 'em."

      This encounter took place on the street in front of the house. The

      Professor went wearily upstairs and lay down on the couch, his refuge

      from this ever-increasing fatigue. He really didn't see what he was

      going to do about the matter of domicile. He couldn't make himself

      believe that he was ever going to live in the new house again. He didn't

      belong there. He remembered some lines of a translation from the Norse

      he used to read long ago in one of his mother's few books, a little

      two-volume Ticknor and Fields edition of Longfellow, in blue and gold,

      that used to lie on the parlour table: For thee a house was built Ere

      thou was born; For thee a mould was made Ere thou of woman camest.

      Lying on his old couch, he could almost believe himself in that house

      already. The sagging springs were like the sham upholstery that is put

      in coffins. Just the equivocal American way of dealing with serious

      facts, he reflected. Why pretend that it is possible to soften that last

      hard bed?

      He could remember a time when the loneliness of death had terrified him,

      when the idea of it was insupportable. He used to feel that if his wife

      could but lie in the same coffin with him, his body would not be so

      insensible that the nearness of hers would not give it comfort. But now

      he thought of eternal solitude with gratefulness; as a release from

      every obligation, from every form of effort. It was the Truth.

      One morning, just as St. Peter was leaving the house to go to his

      class-room, the postman handed him two letters, one addressed in

      Lillian's hand and one in Louie's. He put them into his pocket. The feel

      of them disturbed him. They were of a suspicious thinness--as if they

      didn't contain amusing gossip, but announced sudden decisions. He set

      off down the street, sniffing the lake-cooled morning air and trying to

      overcome a feeling of nervous dread.

      All the morning those two letters lay in his breast pocket. Though they

      were so light, their effect was to make him drop his shoulders and look

      woefully tired. The weather, too, had changed, come on suddenly hot and

      sultry at noon, as if getting ready for a storm. When his classes were

      over and he was back in his study again, St. Peter felt no interest in

      lunch. He took out the two letters and ripped them open with his

      forefinger to have it over. Yes, all plans were changed, and by the

      happiest of expectations. The family were hurrying home to prepare for

      the advent of a young Marsellus. They would sail on the sixteenth, on

      the Berengaria.

      Lillian added a postscript to the effect that by this same mail she was

      getting off a letter to Augusta, who would come to him for the keys of

      the new house. She would be the best person to open the house and

      arrange to have the cleaning done. She would take it entirely off his

      shoulders and see that everything was properly put in order.

      They were sailing on the sixteenth, and this was the seventeenth; they

      were already on the water. The Berengaria was a five-day boat. St. Peter

      caught up his hat and light overcoat and started down the stairs.

      Halfway down, he stopped short, went back to his study, and softly shut

      the door behind him. He sat down, forgetting to take off his overcoat,

      though the afternoon was so hot and his face was damp with perspiration.

      He sat motionless, breathing unevenly, one dark hand lying clenched on

      his writing-table. There must, he was repeating to himself, there must

      be some way in which a man who had always tried to live up to his

      responsibilities could, when the hour of desperation came, avoid meeting

      his own family.

      He loved his family, he would make any sacrifice for them, but just now

      he couldn't live with them. He must be alone. That was more necessary,

      even, than his marriage had been in his vehement youth. He could not

      live with his family again--not even with Lillian. Especially not with

      Lillian! Her nature was intense and positive; it was like a chiselled

      surface, a die, a stamp upon which he could not be beaten out any

      longer. If her character were reduced to an heraldic device, it would be

      a hand (a beautiful hand) holding flaming arrows--the shafts of her

      violent loves and hates, her clear-cut ambitions.

      "In great misfortunes," he told himself, "people want to be alone. They

      have a right to be. And the misfortunes that occur within one are the

      greatest. Surely the saddest thing in the world is falling out of

      love--if once one has ever fallen in."

      Falling out, for him, seemed to mean falling out of all domestic and

      social relations, out of his place in the human family, indeed.

      St. Peter did not go out of the house that afternoon. He did not leave

      his study. He sat at his desk with bent head, reviewing his life, trying

      to see where he had made his mistake, to account for the fact that he


      now wanted to run away from everything he had intensely cared for.

      Late in the afternoon the heaviness of the air in the room drove him to

      the window. He saw that a storm was coming on. Great orange and purple

      clouds were blowing up from the lake, and the pine-trees over about the

      Physics laboratory were blacker than cypresses and looked contracted, as

      if they were awaiting something. The rain broke, and it turned cold.

      The rain-storm was over in half and hour, but a heavy blow had set in

      for the night. The wind would be a protection, he thought. Even Augusta

      would hardly come plodding up the stairs to-night. It seemed strange to

      be dreading Augusta, but just now he did dread her. He believed he was

      safe, for to-night. Though it was only five o'clock, the sky was black,

      and the room was dusky and chilly. He lit the stove and lay down on the

      couch. The fire made a flickering pattern of light on the wall. He lay

      watching it, vacantly; without meaning to, he fell asleep. For a long

      while he slept deeply and peacefully. Then the wind, increasing in

      violence, disturbed him. He began to be aware of noises--things banging

      and slamming about. He turned over on his back and slept deeper still.

      When St. Peter at last awoke, the room was pitch-black and full of gas.

      He was cold and numb, felt sick and rather dazed. The long-anticipated

      coincidence had happened, he realized. The storm had blown the stove out

      and the window shut. The thing to do was to get up and open the window.

      But suppose he did not get up--? How far was a man required to exert

      himself against accident? How would such a case be decided under English

      law? He hadn't lifted his hand against himself--was he required to lift

      it for himself?

      Chapter 5

      At midnight St. Peter was lying in his study, on his box-couch, covered

      up with blankets, a hot water bottle at his feet; he knew it was

      midnight, for the clock of Augusta's church across the park was ringing

      the hour. Augusta herself was there in the room, sitting in her old

      sewing-chair by the kerosene lamp, wrapped up in a shawl. She was

      reading a little much-worn religious book that she always carried in her

      handbag. Presently he spoke to her.

      "Just when did you come in, Augusta?"

      She got up and came over to him.

      "Are you feeling comfortable, Doctor St. Peter?"

      "Oh, very thank you. When did you happen in?"

      "Not any too soon, sir," she said gravely, with a touch of reproof. "You

      never would take my cautions about that old stove, and it very nearly

      asphyxiated you. I was barely in time to pull you out."

      "You pulled me out, literally? Where to?"

      "Into the hall. I came over in the storm to ask you for the keys of the

      new house--I didn't get Mrs. St. Peter's letter until I got home from

      work this evening, and I came right over. When I opened the front door I

      smelled gas, and I knew that stove had been up to its old tricks. I

      supposed you'd gone out and forgot to turn it off. When I got to the

      second floor I heard a fall overhead, and it flashed across me that you

      were up here and had been overcome. I ran up and opened the two windows

      at the head of the stairs and dragged you out into the wind. You were

      lying on the floor." She lowered her voice. "It was perfectly frightful

      in here."

      "I seem to remember Dudley's being here."

      "Yes, after I'd turned off the stove and opened everything up, I went

      next door and telephoned for Doctor Dudley. I thought I'd better not say

      what the trouble was, but I asked him to come at once, as you'd been

      taken ill. You soon came round, but you were flighty." Augusta hurried

      over her recital. She was evidently embarrassed by the behaviour of the

      stove and the condition in which she had found him. It was an ugly

      accident, and she didn't want the neighbours to know of it.

      "You must have great presence of mind, Augusta, and a strong arm as

      well. You say you found me on the floor? I thought I was lying here on

      the couch. I remember waking up and smelling gas."

      "You were stupefied, but you must have got up and tried to get to the

      door before you were overcome. I was on the second floor when I heard

      you fall. I'd never heard anyone fall before, that I can remember, but I

      seemed to know just what it was.

      "I'm sorry to have given you a fright. I hope the gas hasn't made your

      head ache."

      "All's well that ends well, as they say. But I doubt if you ought to be

      talking, sir. Could you go to sleep again? I can stay till morning, if

      you prefer."

      "I'd be greatly obliged if you would stay the night with me, Augusta. It

      would be a comfort. I seem to feel rather lonely--for the first time in

      months."

      "That's because your family are coming home. Very well, sir."

      "You do a good deal of this sort of thing--watching and sitting up with

      people, don't you?"

      "Well, when happen to be sewing in a house where there's sickness, I am

      sometimes called upon."

      Augusta sat down by the table and again took up little religious book.

      St. Peter, with half-closed eyes, lay watching her--regarding in her

      humankind, as if after a definite absence from the world of men and

      women. If he had thought of Augusta sooner, he would have got up from

      the couch sooner. Her image would have at once suggested the proper

      action.

      Augusta, he reflected, had always been a corrective, a remedial

      influence. When she sewed for them, she breakfasted at the house--that

      was part of the arrangement. She came early, often directly from church,

      and had her breakfast with the Professor, before the rest of the family

      were up. Very often she gave him some wise observation or discreet

      comment to begin the day with. She wasn't at all afraid to say things

      that were heavily, drearily true, and though he used to wince under

      them, he hurried off with the feeling that they were good for him, that

      he didn't have to hear such sayings half often enough. Augusta was like

      the taste of bitter herbs; she was the bloomless side of life that he

      had always run away from,--yet when he had to face it, he found that it

      wasn't altogether repugnant. Sometimes she used to telephone Mrs. St.

      Peter that she would be a day late, because there had been a death in

      the family where she was sewing just then, and she was "needed." When

      she met him at the table the next morning, she would look just a little

      more grave than usual. While she ate a generous breakfast, she would

      reply to his polite questions about the illness or funeral with

      befitting solemnity, and then go readily to another topic, not holding

      the dolorous note. He used to say that he didn't mind hearing Augusta

      announce these deaths which seemed to happen so frequently along her

      way, because her manner of speaking about it made death seem less

      uncomfortable. She hadn't any of the sentimentality that comes from a

      fear of dying. She talked about death as she spoke of a hard winter or a

      rainy March, or any of the sadnesses of nature.

      It occurred to St. Peter, as he lay warm and relaxed but und
    esirous of

      sleep, that he would rather have Augusta with him just now than anyone

      he could think of. Seasoned and sound and on the solid earth she surely

      was, and, for all her matter-of-factness and hard-handedness, kind and

      loyal. He even felt a sense of obligation toward her, instinctive,

      escaping definition, but real. And when you admitted that a thing was

      real, that was enough--now.

      He didn't, on being quite honest with himself, feel any obligations

      toward his family. Lillian had had the best years of his life, nearly

      thirty, and joyful years they had been, nothing could ever change that.

      But they were gone. His daughters had outgrown any great need of him. In

      certain wayward moods Kitty would always come to him. But Rosamond, on

      that shopping expedition in Chicago had shown him how painful the

      paternal relation could be. There was still Augusta, however; a world

      full of Augustas, with whom one was outward bound.

      All the afternoon he had sat there at the table where now Augusta was

      reading, thinking over his life, trying to see where had made his

      mistake. Perhaps the mistake was merely in an attitude of mind. He had

      never learned to live without delight. And he would have to learn to,

      just as, in a Prohibition country, he supposed he would have to learn to

      live without sherry. Theoretically he knew that life is possible, may be

      even pleasant, without joy, without passionate griefs. But it had never

      occurred to him that he might have to live like that.

      Though he had been low-spirited all summer, he told the truth when he

      told Dr. Dudley that he had not been melancholy. He had no more thought

      of suicide than he had thought of embezzling. He had always regarded it

      as a grave social misdemeanour--except when it occurred in very evil

      times, as a form of protest. Yet when he was confronted by accidental

      extinction, he had felt no will to resist, but had let chance take its

      way, as it had done with him so often. He did not remember springing up

      from the couch, though he did remember a crisis, a moment of acute,

      agonized strangulation.

      His temporary release from consciousness seemed to have been beneficial.

      He had let something go--and it was gone: something very precious, that

      he could not consciously have relinquished, probably. He doubted whether

      his family would ever realize that he was not the same man they had said

      good-bye to; they would be too happily preoccupied with their own

      affairs. If his apathy hurt them, they could not possibly be so much

      hurt as he had been already. At least, he felt the ground under his

      feet. He thought he knew where he was, and that he could face with

      fortitude the Berengaria and the future.

      THE END

     

     

     



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