书城公版Idle Ideas in 1905
26239700000010

第10章 DO WE LIE A-BED TOO LATE?(2)

What did you expect?Fifteen years have passed--fifteen years of struggle with the grim realities.He is fat and bald.Eleven children have to be provided for.High ideals will not even pay the bootmaker.To exist you have to fight for mean ends with mean weapons.And the sweet girl heroine!Now the worried mother of eleven brats!One rings down the curtain amid Satanic laughter.

That is why,for one reason among so many,I love this mystic morning light.It has a strange power of revealing the beauty that is hidden from us by the coarser beams of the full day.These worn men and women,grown so foolish looking,so unromantic;these artisans and petty clerks plodding to their monotonous day's work;these dull-eyed women of the people on their way to market to haggle over sous,to argue and contend over paltry handfuls of food.In this magic morning light the disguising body becomes transparent.They have grown beautiful,not ugly,with the years of toil and hardship;these lives,lived so patiently,are consecrated to the service of the world.Joy,hope,pleasure--they have done with all such,life for them is over.Yet they labour,ceaselessly,uncomplainingly.It is for the children.

One morning,near Brussels,I encountered a cart of faggots,drawn by a hound so lean that stroking him might have hurt a dainty hand.Iwas shocked--angry,till I noticed his fellow beast of burden pushing the cart from behind.Such a scarecrow of an old woman!There was little to choose between them.I walked with them a little way.She lived near Waterloo.All day she gathered wood in the great forest,and starting at three o'clock each morning,the two lean creatures between them dragged the cart nine miles to Brussels,returning when they had sold their load.With luck she might reckon on a couple of francs.I asked her if she could not find something else to do.

Yes,it was possible,but for the little one,her grandchild.Folks will not employ old women burdened with grandchildren.

You fair,dainty ladies,who would never know it was morning if somebody did not enter to pull up the blind and tell you so!You do well not to venture out in this magic morning light.You would look so plain--almost ugly,by the side of these beautiful women.

It is curious the attraction the Church has always possessed for the marketing classes.Christ drove them from the Temple,but still,in every continental city,they cluster round its outer walls.It makes a charming picture on a sunny morning,the great cathedral with its massive shadow forming the background;splashed about its feet,like a parterre of gay flowers around the trunk of some old tree,the women,young girls in their many coloured costumes,sitting before their piled-up baskets of green vegetables,of shining fruits.

In Brussels the chief market is held on the Grande Place.The great gilded houses have looked down upon much the same scene every morning these four hundred years.In summer time it commences about half-past four;by five o'clock it is a roaring hive,the great city round about still sleeping.