Authors: Iris Murdoch
âHave some more sherry, Hilary, just a smidgin?' A new fashionable word of Laura's. Diminutive of âsmudge' ?
âThanks.'
âYou're wearing odd socks again. Look, Freddie, Hilary's wearing odd socks again!' This was a regular joke which I was tired of. I would have checked my socks but for the telephone episode.
âI've been admiring your luscious stockings, I can't take my eyes off your ankles.' I talked this sort of vulgar nonsense to Laura. I always acted the goat with the Impiatts, they seemed to expect it. Sometimes there was not a pin to choose between me and Reggie Farbottom, the office comic.
Laura, no longer either young or slim, was a good-looking woman. She came of a Quaker family and had given up her education to marry Freddie, a fact to which she often alluded. She was, like her husband, extremely energetic. There was something of the games-mistress. Will and energy poured from her, often in the form of a sort of anxiety, possibly an anxiety always to be doing something worth-while. She had a sweet radiant intense face and those very wide-apart eyes which give a slightly dazed and dazing mesmeric effect to the glance. She grinned rather than smiled and had a deep resonant emphatic incisive cultured voice which could be tiring to listen to. Some word in each sentence had to be rather comically emphasized: a sign more of shyness than of the bossiness which it often seemed to express. She was always quipping. Her eyes were a fine chestnut brown and her hair, once a dark brown and now rather grey, had until lately been bound about her head in two severe plaits. Now however she had taken to wearing it loose, streaming down her back nearly to her waist. This was disconcerting: a woman with long streaming grey hair cannot but look a little strange, especially if her eyes glitter with some exalted yearning. Now that her hair was down Laura's energy, quite undiminished, seemed to have become more diffused, less directed and prosaic, as if she were recovering some of the misty electrical indeterminateness of youth. She had also lately developed a taste for flowing robes. Tonight she was wearing an ankle-length tent of green shot silk, split up the side to reveal blue stockings. She always dressed up for our Thursdays, even if it was only me. I did not fail to note this, and she knew I noted it. No wonder I shaved.
âHow is Christopher?' said Laura. She took a maternal interest in my young people.
âMuch the same. Harmless. Picturesque. Useless.'
âHave you given Christopher a day?' The reference was to my having regular days of the week for seeing my friends.
âNo one under thirty is allowed to have a day.'
âIs that a rule? I think you've just invented it!'
âHilary lives by rules,' said Freddie. âHe separates everything from everything.'
âAnd everyone from everyone!' said Laura.
âSeparation is the essence of a bachelor's existence,' I said.
âHe likes to live in other people's worlds and have none of his own.'
âHilary is all things to all men.'
âWho do you think will succeed Templar-Spence?' said Clifford Larr.
They went off into office gossip. Laura disappeared to the kitchen. She was a good cook if you liked that sort of cooking. I contemplated the drawing-room and marvelled at the expensive knick-knacks and the absence of dust. Freddie and my fellow guest had got on to the economy. âThe Sibyl's leaves, what an image of inflation!' said Clifford Larr.
I never minded being left out of serious conversations. Ignorance should prompt modesty. And it suited me to be the one left to amuse the girls. Women are rarely pompous. I had no instinct to play the man as layer down of law. Freddie Impiatt did so with a touching unawareness. Freddie was stout, a waistcoat wearer, not tall, a little bald, monumental and greying, a kind conceited man with a big honest head and a pleasant horsy smile. He could not pronounce his r's. Clifford Larr was thin and tall, a bit dandified, not an easy man, nervous, sarcastic, armed with conscious superiority, no sufferer of fools, one of those prickly unwelcoming reserved eccentrics in whom the Civil Service abounds.
â
A table, Ã table!
'
Talking of the pound, they followed me down the stairs in answer to Laura's shout.
âFancy French muck again, Hilary!'
âI sympathize with Wittgenstein who said he didn't mind what he ate so long as it was always the same.'
âHilary lives on baked beans when he isn't here. What did you have for lunch today, Hilary?'
âBaked beans, of course.'
âHave some white wine, Hilary.'
âJust a smidget.'
âAre those boys at your place still smoking pot?'
âI don't know what they do.'
âAnother case of separation!'
âI must come and see them again,' said Laura. âI'm writing another article. And I feel I might be able to help them somehow. All right, Hilary, no need to sneer!'
Laura, as part of the latest exaltation, was attending lectures on sociology and writing intellectual women's page journalism about âthe young'.
âThe young are so selfless and brave compared with us.'
âYah.'
âI mean it, Hilary. They
are
brave. They take such big decisions and they don't worry about money and status and they aren't afraid to live in the present. They put their whole lives at risk for the sake of ideas and experience.'
âMore fools they.'
âI'm sure you were fearfully anxious and careful when you were young, Hilary.'
âI thought about nothing but my exams.'
âThere you are. When are you going to tell me about your childhood, Hilary?'
âNever.'
âHilary is pathologically discreet.'
âIn my view, the pound should not have been allowed to float,' said Clifford Larr.
âWith this crisis on we've decided to stay at home for Christmas.'
âYou know so many languages, Hilary, but you never travel.'
âI think Hilary never leaves London.'
âI think he never leaves the perimeter of the royal parks.'
âDo you still run round Hyde Park every morning, Hilary?'
âWhat's your view of the pound, Hilary?'
âThat it should bash every other currency to pieces.'
âHilary is so competitive and chauvinistic.'
âI love my country.'
âSo old-fashioned.'
âIf you sing
Land of Hope and Glory,
Freddie will sing
Soviet Fatherland.
'
âPatriotism used to be taught in schools,' said Clifford Larr.
âMy school regarded patriotism as bad form,' said Freddie.
âEton is so bolshy,' said Laura.
âThe government will fall on price increases,' said Clifford Larr.
âI'm fed up with hearing the proles binding about the price of meat,' said Freddie.
âWhy don't they eat caviare.'
âHilary has missed the point as usual.'
âThey don't have to eat beef all the time, we don't.'
âThey could live on beans, Hilary does.'
âOr pilchards. Or brown rice. Much healthier.'
âAll right. I just don't like Freddie's vocabulary'
âHilary is so combative.'
âTalking of proles, Hilary, I wish you'd tell Arthur Fisch not to let those drunks visit him at the office.'
âThey aren't drunks, they're drug addicts.'
âBut do you agree, Hilary?'
âI agree.'
âI mean, it won't do.'
âHilary, has Freddie told you about the office pantomime?'
âNo, I haven't told him. It's to be
Peter Pan.
'
âOh no!'
âDon't you like
Peter Pan,
Hilary?'
âIt's my favourite play.'
âHilary thinks Freddie will desecrate it.'
âNo need to ask who will play Hook and Mr Darling.'
âThe director always bags the star part.'
âFreddie is an actor
manqué.
'
âA great ambiguous work of art,' said Clifford Larr. âWill you favour a Freudian interpretation?'
âNo, I think a Marxist one.'
âUgh.'
âDon't be so negative, Hilary.'
âWhy not a Christian interpretation, Peter as the Christ Child?'
âHilary says why not a Christian interpretation!'
âReggie Farbottom will play Smee.'
âAaargh.'
âHilary is envious.'
âI must be going now,' said Clifford Larr. He always left early. We all trooped upstairs.
After he had gone and we were sitting in the drawing-room drinking coffee he was of course discussed.
âSuch an unhappy man,' said Laura. âI'm so sorry for him.'
âI don't know anything about him,' I said, âbut I don't know why you assume he's unhappy. You two are always assuming people are unhappy so that you can pity them. I suspect you think he's unhappy just because he isn't married. You probably think I'm unhappy. As soon as I've gone you'll say, “Poor Hilary, I'm so sorry for him, he's so unhappy”.'
âDon't bite us, Hilary,' said Freddie. âSome whisky?'
âA smudgeling.'
âA what?'
âA smudgeling.'
âWell, I persist in thinking he's unhappy,' said Laura, pouring the whisky. âHe looks like an interesting man but he's so stiff and solemn and he only wants to talk about the pound. He never talks about anything personal. I think he's got a secret sorrow.'
âWomen always think men have secret sorrows. It's a way of separating them from other women.'
âAnd men like you, Hilary, always think women are against other women.'
âThat's right, darling, hit him back.'
âAnd he wears a cross round his neck.'
âClifford?
Does
he?'
âSomething on a chain anyway, I think it's a cross, I saw it through his nylon shirt last summer.'
âYou aren't angry with me, are you, Laura?'
âOf course not, silly! Hilary talks big but it's quite easy to put him down.'
âClifford can't be
religious,
can he?'
âI don't know,' said Freddie, âhe's so remote and clammed up, I doubt if he has any real friends at all. He might be a Roman Catholic. I certainly daren't ask.'
âLaura thinks he needs a woman.'
âHilary's crest soon rises again!'
âI want to play Smee.'
âHilary just wants to spite Reggie.'
âAre you serious, Hilary? If you would like to you can be a pirate â '
âOf course I'm not serious. You know what I think about the office pantomime.'
âHilary is anti-life.'
âYes, thank God.'
âI'm just going to find that brandy,' said Freddie. He went off.
I was never sure whether Freddie's departures on my Thursdays were purely accidental or whether they were concerted with Laura so that she could interrogate me in a more intimate way. She certainly always set about probing at once and made the most of her time.
âI think you've got a secret sorrow, Hilary.'
âI've got about two hundred.'
âTell me one.'
âI'm getting old.'
âNonsense. How is Crystal?'
âAll right.'
âHow is Tommy?'
âAll right.'
âHilary, you are a chatterbox!'
When I left the Impiatts the evening was not yet over for me. I did not stay late since I was expected elsewhere well before midnight. Of course I did not tell my hosts this, they would have thought it âbad form'. On Thursdays I always went to fetch Arthur Fisch away from Crystal. (Crystal is my sister.) This âfetching away' was an old tradition. The idea was that Crystal sometimes found Arthur hard to get rid of and so I was to come and remove him. Or was it that I had decided to control, in both the French and English senses, my sister's relations with this young fellow? The origin of the arrangement was lost in history. And indeed Arthur was no longer all that young, none of us was.
Crystal lived in a bed-sitter flat in one of the shabby little streets beyond the North End Road, and at a brisk pace I could do the walk from Queen's Gate Terrace in about twenty minutes. I always walked in London if I could. Crystal was over five years my junior and, like myself, unmarried. She had had various jobs. She had been a waitress, a clerk, she had worked in a chocolate factory. She was now modestly set up as a dressmaker, but seemed to spend most of her time altering her neighbours' skirts for a few pence. I subsidized her a bit. No one could have lived more cheaply than Crystal. Her biggest weekly expenses were entertaining Arthur and me. The Impiatts never invited Crystal to dinner as she was too ignorant to be presentable. Laura used to invite her to tea occasionally.
Crystal lived alone in a small shabby terrace house. Her bed-sitter, with tiny kitchen annexe, occupied the upper floor. There was a bath in the kitchen. The lavatory was on the ground floor, where there was also a dentist's surgery and waiting-room. The basement was intermittently occupied by a motor cycle repairer and (we thought) receiver of stolen goods in a small way. The whole area was, or was then, very decrepit and poor. The stucco of the fronts, once painted different colours, had faded into a uniform grime and fallen off in patches to reveal ochre-coloured brick beneath. Here and there a gaping or boarded window or a doorless doorway proclaimed the abandonment of hope. The inhabitants were mostly âprotected tenants' at low rents (Crystal was such a one) for whom the landlords found it not worth their while to do repairs.
I let myself in with my key and made my way upstairs. Crystal and Arthur were sitting at the table. They both rose when I entered, behaving as usual as if they were slightly afraid of me. They always acted a little guiltily on these occasions. Not because they had been making love, because they had not. Crystal, at thirty-seven, was still a virgin. Arthur was in love with her, but nothing happened, that I certainly knew. This evening I thought the atmosphere was rather more charged than usual, as if I had interrupted some particularly intense discussion. This annoyed me. Arthur was rather red in the face, and Crystal made little awkward darting movements to simulate some neutral and innocent activity. Perhaps they had just been holding hands. A bottle of cheap wine, brought by Arthur, stood on the table. Crystal hardly drank. There was always plenty left for me.