Kurt would like it?" "For God's sake," I said, "you don't mean to spend your life with Kurt, do you?" "I don't know. He seems to mean to spend it with me. 'It'th all right for him, I reckon, maybe,'" he said, mimicking Kurt's accent, and then he added what, if I had paid more attention, should have given me the key I lacked; at the time I heard and remembered it, without taking notice. "You know, Charles," he said, "it's rather a pleasant change when all your life you've had people looking after you, to have someone to look after yourself. Only of course it has to be someone pretty hopeless to need looking after by me." I was able to straighten his money affairs before I left. He had lived till then by getting into difficulties and then telegraphing for odd sums to his lawyers. I saw the branch manager of the Bank of Indo-China and arranged for him, if funds were forthcoming from London, to receive Sebastian's quarterly allowance and pay him a weekly sum of pocket money with a reserve to be drawn in emergencies. This sum was only to be given to Sebastian personally, and only when the manager was satisfied that he had a proper use for it. Sebastian agreed readily to all this. "Otherwise," he said, "Kurt will get me to sign a cheque for the whole lot when I'm tight and then he'll go off and get into all kinds of trouble." I saw Sebastian home from the hospital. He seemed weaker in his basket chair than he had been in bed. The two sick men, he and Kurt, sat opposite one another with the gramophone between them. "It was time you came back," said Kurt. "I need you." "Do you, Kurt?" "I reckon so. It's not so good being alone when you're sick. That boy's a lazy fellow -- always slipping off when I want him. Once he stayed out all night and there was no one to make my coffee when I woke up. It's no good having a foot full of pus. Times I can't sleep good. Maybe another time I shall slip off, too, and go where I can be looked after." He clapped his hands but no servant came. "You see?" he said. "What d'you want?" "Cigarettes. I got some in the bag under my bed." Sebastian began painfully to rise from his chair. "I'll get them," I said. "Where's his bed?" "No, that's my job," said Sebastian. "Yeth," said Kurt, "I reckon that's Sebastian's job." So I left him with his friend in the little enclosed house at the end of the alley. There was nothing more I could do for Sebastian. I had meant to return direct to Paris, but this business of Sebastian's allowance meant that I must go to London and see Brideshead. I travelled by sea, taking the P. & O. from Tangier, and was home in early June. "Do you consider," asked Brideshead, ''that there is anything vicious in my brother's connection with this German?" "No. I'm sure not. It's simply a case of two waifs coming together." "You say he'is a criminal?" "I said 'a criminal type.' He's been in the military prison and was dishonourably discharged." "And the doctor says Sebastian is killing himself with drink?" "Weakening himself. He hasn't D.T.'s or cirrhosis." "He's not insane?" "Certainly hot. He's found a companion he happens to like and a place where he happens to like living." "Then he must have his allowance as you suggest. The thing is quite clear." In some ways Brideshead was an easy man to deal with. He had a kind of mad certainty about everything which made his decisions swift and easy. "Would you like to paint this house?" he asked suddenly. "A picture of the front, another of the back on the park, another of the staircase, another of the big drawing-room? Four small oils; that is what my father wants done for a record, to keep at Brideshead. I don't know any painters. Julia said you specialized in architecture." "Yes," I said. "I should like to very much." "You know it's being pulled down? My father's selling it. They are going to put up a block of flats here. They're keeping the name -- we can't stop them apparently." "What a very sad thing." "Well, I'm sorry of course. But you think it good architecturally?" "One of the most beautiful houses I know." "Can't see it. I've always thought it rather ugly. Perhaps your pictures will make me see it differently." This was my first commission; I had to work against time, for the contractors were only waiting for the final signature to start their work of destruction. In spite, or perhaps because, of that -- for it is my vice to spend too long on a canvas, never content to leave well alone -- those four paintings are particular favourites of mine, and it was their success, both with myself and others, that confirmed me in what has since been my career. I began in the long drawing-room, for they were anxious to shift the furniture, which had stood there since it was built. It was a long, elaborate, symmetrical Adam room, with two bays, of windows opening into Green Park. The light, streaming in from the west on the afternoon when I began to paint there, was fresh green from the young trees outside. I had the perspective set out in pencil and the detail carefully placed. I held back from painting, like a diver on the water's edge; once in I found myself buoyed and exhilarated. I was normally a slow and deliberate painter; that afternoon and all next day, and the day after, I worked fast. I could do nothing wrong. At the end of each passage I paused, tense, afraid to start , the next, fearing, like a gambler, that luck must turn and the pile be lost. Bit by bit, minute by minute, the thing came into being. There were no difficulties; the intricate multiplicity of light and colour became a whole; the right colour was where I wanted it on the palette; each brush stroke, as soon as it was complete, seemed to have been there always. Presently on the last afternoon I heard a voice behind me say; "May I stay here and watch?" I turned and found Cordelia. "Yes," I said, "if you don't talk," and I worked on, oblivious of her, until the failing sun made me. put up my brushes. "It must be lovely to be able to do that." I had forgotten she was there. "It is." I could not even now leave my picture, although the sun was down and the room fading to monochrome. I took it from the easel and held it up to the windows, put it back and lightened a shadow. Then, suddenly weary in head and eyes and back and arm, I gave it up for the evening and turned to Cordelia. She was now fifteen and had grown tall, nearly to her full height, in the last eighteen months. She had not the promise of Julia's full Quattrocento loveliness; there was a touch of Brideshead already in her length of nose and high cheekbone; she was in black, mourning for her mother. "I'm tired," I said. "I bet you are. Is it finished?" "Practically. I must go over it again to-morrow." "D'you know it's long past dinner-time? There's no one here to cook anything now. I only came up to-day, and didn't realize how far the decay had gone. You wouldn't like to take me out to dinner, would you?" We left by the garden door, into the park, and walked in the twilight to the Ritz Grill. "You've seen Sebastian? He won't come home, even now?" I did not realize till then that she had understood so much. I said so. "Well, I love him more than anyone," she said. "It's sad about Marchers, isn't it? Do you know they're going tp build a block of flats, and that Rex wanted to take what he called a 'penthouse' at the top. Isn't it like him? Poor Julia. That was too much for her. He couldn't understand at all; he thought she would like to keep up with her old home. Things have all come to an end very quickly, haven't they? Apparently Papa has been terribly in debt for a long time. Selling Marchers has put him straight again and saved I don't know how much a year in rates. But it seems a shame to pull it down. Julia says she'd sooner that than to have someone else live there." "What's going to happen to you?" "What, indeed? There are all kinds of suggestions. Aunt Fanny Rosscommon wants me to live with her. Then Rex and Julia talk o taking over half Brideshe'ad and living there. Papa won't come back. We thought he might, but no. "They've closed the chapel at Brideshead, Bridey and the Bishop; Mummy's requiem was the last mass said there. After she was buried the priest came in -- I was there alone. I don't think he saw me--and took out the altar stone and put it in his bag; then he burned the wads of wool with the holy oil on them and threw the ash outside; he emptied the holy water stoup and blew out the lamp in the sanctuary and left the tabernacle open and empty, as though from now on it was always to be Good Friday. I suppose none of this makes any sense to you, Charles, poor agnostic. I stayed there till he was gone, and then, suddenly, there wasn't any chapel there any more, just an oddly decorated room. I can't tell you what it felt like. You've never been to Tenebrae, I suppose?" "Never." "Well, if you had you'd know what the Jews felt about their temple. Quomodo sedet sola civitas . . . it's a beautiful chant. You ought to go once, just to hear it." "Still trying to convert me, Cordelia?" "Oh, no. That's all over, too. D'you know what Papa said when he became a Catholic? Mummy told me once. He said to her: 'You have brought back my family to the faith of their ancestors.' Pompous, you know. It takes people different ways. Anyhow, the family haven't been very constant, have they? There's him gone and Sebastian gone and Julia gone. But God won't let them go for long, you know. I wondtx if you remember the story Mummy read us the evening Sebastian first got drunk -- I mean the bad evening. Father Brown said something like 'I caught him' (the thief) 'with an unseen hook and an invisible line which is long enough to let him wander to the ends of the world and still to bring him back with a twitch upon the thread.'" We scarcely mentioned her mother. All the time we talked, she ate voraciously. Once she said: -- "Did you see Sir Adrian Person's poem in The Times? It's funny, he knew her best of anyone--he loved her all his life, you know -- and yet it doesn't seem to have anything to do with her at all. "I got on best with her of any of us, but I don't believe I ever really loved her. Not as she wanted or deserved. It's odd I didn't, because I'm full of natural affections." "I never really knew your mother," I said. "You didn't like her. I sometimes think when people wanted to hate God they hated Mummy." "What do you mean by that, Cordelia?" "Well, you see, she was saintly but she wasn't a saint. No one could really hate a saint, could they? They can't really hate God either. When they want to hate Him and His saints they have to find something like themselves and pretend it's God and hate that. I suppose you think that's all bosh." "I heard almost the same thing once before--from someone very different." "Oh, I'm quite serious. I've thought about it a lot. It seems to explain poor Mummy." Then this odd child tucked into her dinner with renewed relish. "First time I've ever been taken our. to dinner alone at a restaurant," she said. Later: "When Julia heard they were selling Marchers she said: 'Poor Cordelia. She won't have her coming-out ball there after all.' It's a thing we used to talk about--like my being her bridesmaid. That didn't come off either. When Julia had her ball I was allowed down for an hour, to sit in the corner with Aunt Fanny, and she said, 'In six years' time you'll have all this.' ... I hope I've got a vocation." "I don't know what that means." "It means you can be a nun. If you haven't a vocation it's no good however much you want to be; and if you have a vocation, you can't get away from it, however much you hate it. Bridey thinks he has a vocation and hasn't. I used to think Sebastian had and hated it--but I don't know now. Everything has changed so much suddenly." But I had no patience with this convent chatter. I had felt the brush take life in my hand that afternoon; I had had my finger in the great, succulent pie of creation. I was a man of the Renaissance that evening--of Browning's Renaissance. I, who had walked the streets of Rome in Genoa velvet and had seen the stars through Galileo's tube, spurned the friars with their dusty tomes and their sunken, jealous eyes and their crabbed hair-splitting speech. "You'll fall in love," I said. "Oh, I pray not. I say, do you think I could have another of those scrumptious meringues?" BOOK II A TWITCH UPON THE THREAD Chapter One my theme is memory, that winged host that soared about me one grey morning of war-time. These memories, which are my life--for we possess nothing certainly except the past--were always with me. Like the pigeons of St. Mark's, they were everywhere, under my feet, singly, in pairs, in little honey-voiced congregations, nodding, strutting, winking, rolling the tender feathers of their necks, perching sometimes, if I stood still, on my shoulder or pecking a broken biscuit from between my lips; until, suddenly, the noon gun boomed and in a moment, with a flutter and sweep of wings, the pavement was bare and the whole sky above dark with a tumult of fowl. Thus it was that morning. These memories are the memorials and pledges of the vital hours of a lifetime. These hours of afflatus in the human spirit, the springs of art, are, in their mystery, akin to the epochs of history, when a race which for centuries has lived content, unknown, behind its own frontiers, digging, eating, sleeping, begetting, doing what was requisite for survival and nothing else, will, for a generation or two, stupefy the world; commit all manner of crimes, perhaps; follow the wildest chimeras, go down in the end in agony, but leave behind a record of new heights scaled and new rewards won for all mankind; the vision fades, the soul sickens, and the routine of survival starts again. The human soul enjoys these rare, classic periods, but, apart from them, we are seldom single or unique; we keep company in this world with a hoard of abstractions and reflections and counterfeits of ourselves -- the sensual man, the economic man, the man of reason, the beast, the machine and the sleep-walker, and heaven knows what besides, all in our own image, indistinguishable from ourselves to the outward eye. We get borne along, out of sight in the press, unresisting, till we get the chance to drop behind unnoticed, or to dodge down a side street, pause, j| breathe freely and take our bearings, or to push ahead, out-' distance our shadows, lead them a dance, so that when at length they catch up with us, they look at one another askance, knowing we have a secret we shall never share. For nearly ten years I was thus borne along a road outwardly full of change and incident, but never during that time, except sometimes in my painting -- and that at longer and longer intervals-- did I come alive as I had been during the time of my friendship with Sebastian. I took it to be youth, not life, that I was losing. My work upheld me, for I had chosen to do what I could do well, did better daily, and liked doing; incidentally it was something which no one else at that time was attempting to do. I became an architectural painter. I have always loved building, holding it to be not only the highest achievement of man but one in which, at the moment of consummation, things were most clearly taken out of his hands and perfected, without his intention, by other means, and I regarded men as something much less than the buildings they made and inhabited, as mere lodgers and short-term sub-lessees of small importance in the-long, fruitful life of their homes. More even than the work of the great architects, 1 loved buildings that grew silently with the centuries, catching and keeping the best of each generation, while time curbed the artist's pride and the Philistine's vulgarity, and repaired the clumsiness of the dull workman. In such buildings England abounded, and in the last decade of their grandeur, Englishmen seemed for the first time to become conscious of what before was taken for granted, and to salute their achievements at the moment of extinction. Hence my prosperity, far beyond my merits; my work had nothing to recommend it except my growing technical skill, enthusiasm for my subject and independence of popular notions. The financial slump of the period, which left many painters without employment, served to enhance my success, which was, indeed, itself a symptom of the decline. When the water-holes were dry people sought to drink at the mirage. After my first exhibition I was called to all parts of the country to make portraits of houses that were soon to be deserted or debased; indeed, my arrival seemed often to be only a few paces ahead of the auctioneers, a presage of doom. I published three splendid folios--Ryder's Country Seats, Ryder's English Homes, and Ryder's Village and Provincial Architecture, which each sold its thousand copies at five guineas apiece. I seldom failed to please, for there was no conflict between myself and my patrons; we both wanted the same thing. But as the years passed I began to mourn the loss of something I had known in the drawing-room of Marchmain House and once or twice since, the intensity and singleness and the belief that it was not all done by hand--in a word, the inspiration. In quest of this fading light I went abroad, in the Augustan manner, laden with the apparatus of my trade, for two years' refreshment among alien styles. I did not go to Europe; her treasures were safe, too safe, swaddled in expert care, obscured by reverence. Europe could wait. There would be a time for Europe, I thought; all too soon the days would come when I should need a man at my side to put up my easel and carry my paints; when I could not venture more than an hour's journey from a good hotel; when I should need soft breezes and mellow sunshine all day long; then I would take my old eyes to Germany and Italy. Now while I had the strength I would go to the wild lands where man had deserted his post and the jungle was creeping back to its old strongholds. Accordingly, by slow but not easy stages, I travelled through Mexico and Central America in a world which had all I needed, and the change from parkland and hall should have quickened me and set me right with myself. I sought inspiration among gutted palaces and cloisters embowered in weed, derelict churches where the vampire-bats hung in the dome like dry seed-pods and only the ants were ceaselessly astir tunnelling in the rich stalls; cities where no road led, and mausoleums where a single, agued family of Indians sheltered from the rains. There in great labour, sickness and occasionally in some danger, I made the first drawings for Ryder's Latin America. Every few weeks I came to rest, finding myself once more in the zone of trade or tourism, recuperated, set up my studio, transcribed my sketches, anxiously packed the completed canvasses, despatched them to my New York agent, and then set out again, with my small retinue, into the wastes. I was at no great pains to keep touch with England. I followed local advice for my itinerary and had no settled route, so that much of my mail never reached me, and the rest accumulated until there was more than could be read at a sitting. I used to stuff a bundle of letters into my bag and read them when I felt inclined, which was in circumstances so incongruous -- swinging in my hammock under the net by the light of a storm lantern; drifting down-river, sprawled amidships in the canoe, with the boys astern of me lazily keeping our nose out of the bank, with the dark water keeping pace with us, in the green shade, with the great trees towering above us and the monkeys screeching in the sunlight, high overhead among the flowers on the roof of the forest; on the verandah of a hospitable ranch, where the ice and the dice clicked, and a tiger cat played with its chain on the mown grass -- that they seemed voices so distant as to be meaningless; their matter passed clean through the mind, and out, leaving no mark, like the facts about themselves which fellow travellers distribute so freely in American railway trains. But despite this isolation and this long sojourn in a strange world, I remained unchanged, still a small part of myself pretending to be whole. I discarded the experiences of those two years with my tropical kit and returned to New York as I had set out. I had a fine haul -- eleven paintings and fifty odd drawings-- and when eventually I exhibited them in London, the art critics, many of whom hitherto had been patronizing in tone as my success invited, acclaimed a new and richer note in my work. Mr. Ryder [the most respected of them wrote] rises like a fresh young trout to the hypodermic injection of a new culture and discloses a powerful facet in the vista of his potentialities ... By focusing the frankly traditional battery of his elegance and erudition on the maelstrom of barbarism, Mr. Ryder has at last found himself. Grateful words, but, alas, not true by a long chalk. My wife, who crossed to New York to meet me, and saw the fruits of our separation displayed in my agent's office, summed the thing up better by saying: "Of course, I can see they're perfectly brilliant and really rather beautiful in a sinister way, but somehow I don't feel they are quite you" In Europe my wife was sometimes taken for an American because of her dapper and jaunty way of dressing, and the curiously hygienic quality of her prettiness; in America she assumed an English softness and reticence. She arrived a day or two before me, and was on the pier when my ship docked. "It has been a long time," she said fondly when we met. She had not joined the expedition; she explained to our friends that the country was unsuitable and she had her son at home. There was also a daughter now, she remarked, and it came back to me that there had been talk of this before I started, as an additional reason for her staying behind. There had been some mention of it, too, in her letters. "I don't believe you read my letters," she said that night at last, late, after a dinner party and some hours at a cabaret, we found ourselves alone in our hotel bedroom. "Some went astray. I remember distinctly your telling me that the daffodils in the orchard were a dream, that the nurserymaid was a jewel, that the Regency four-poster was a find, but frankly I do not remember hearing that your new baby was called Caroline. Why did you call it that?" "After Charles, of course." "Ah!" "I made Bertha Van Halt godmother. I thought she was safe for a good present. What do you think she gave?" "Bertha Van Halt is a well-known trap. What?" "A fifteen-shilling book token. Now that Johnjohn has a companion -- " "Who?" "Your son, darling. You haven't forgotten him, too?" "For Christ's sake," I said, "why do you call him that?" "It's the name he invented for himself. Don't you think it sweet? Now that Johnjohn has a companion I think we'd better not have any more for some time, don't you?" "Just as you please." "Johnjohn talks of you such a lot. He prays every night for your safe return." She talked in this way while she undressed, with an effort to appear at ease; then she sat at the dressing table, ran a comb through her hair, and with her bare back towards me, looking at herself in the glass, said, "I hope you admire my self-restraint." "Restraint?" "I'm not asking awkward questions. I may say I've been tormented with visions of voluptuous half-castes ever since you went away. But I determined not to ask and I haven't." "That suits me," I said. She left the dressing-table and crossed the room. "Lights out?" "As you like. I'm not sleepy." We lay in our twin beds, a yard or two distant, smoking. I looked at my watch; it was four o'clock, but neither of us was ready to sleep, for in that city there is neurosis in the air which the inhabitants mistake for energy. "I don't believe you've changed at all, Charles." "No, I'm afraid not." "D'you want to change?" "It's the only evidence of life." "But you might change so that you didn't love me any more." "There is that risk." "Charles, you haven't stopped loving me?" "You said yourself I hadn't changed." "Well, I'm beginning to think you have. I haven't." "No," I said, "no; I can see that." "Were you at all frightened at meeting me to-day?" "Not the least." "You didn't wonder if I should have fallen in love with someone else in the meantime?" "No. Have you?" "You know I haven't. Have you?" "No. I'm not in love." My wife seemed content with this answer. She had married me six years ago at the time of my first exhibition, and had done much since then to push our interests. People said she had "made" me, but she herself took credit only for supplying me with a congenial background; she had firm faith in my genius and in the "artistic temperament," and in the principle that things done on the sly are not really done at all. . Presently she said: "Looking forward to getting home?" (My father gave me as a wedding present the price of a house, and I bought an old rectory in my wife's part of the country.) "I've got a surprise for you." "Yes?" "I've turned the old tithe barn into a studio for you, so that you needn't be disturbed by the children or when we have people to stay. I got Emden to do it. Everyone thinks it a great success. There was an article on it in Country Life; I brought it for you to see." She showed me the article:. . . happy example of architectural good manners. . . . Sir Joseph Emden's tactful adaptation of traditional material to modern needs . . . ; there were some photographs; wide oak boards now covered the earthen floor; a high, stone-mullioned bay-window had been built in the north wall, and the great timbered roof, which before had been lost in shadow, now stood out stark, well lit, with clean white plaster between the beams; it looked like a village hall. I remembered the smell of the place, which would now be lost. "I rather liked that barn," I said. "But you'll be able to work there, won't you?" "After squatting in a cloud of sting-fly," I said, "under a sun which scorched the paper off the block as I drew, I could work on the top of an omnibus. I expect the vicar would like to borrow the place for whist drives." "There's a lot of work waiting for you. I promised Lady Anchorage you would do Anchorage House as soon as you got back. That's coming down, too, you know--shops underneath and two-roomed flats above. You don't think, do you, Charles, that all this exotic work you've been doing is going to spoil you for that sort of thing?" "Why should it?" "Well, it's so different. Don't be cross." "It's just another jungle closing in." "I know just how you feel, darling. The Georgian Society made such a fuss, but we couldn't do anything. . . . Did you ever get my letter about Boy?" "Did I? What did it say?" (Boy Mulcaster was her brother.) "About his engagement. It doesn't matter now because it's all off, but Father and Mother were terribly upset. She was an awful girl. They had to give her money in the end." "No, I heard nothing of Boy." "He and Johnjohn are tremendous friends, now. It's so sweet to see them together. Whenever he comes home the first thing he does is to drive straight to the Old Rectory. He just walks into the house, pays no attention to anyone else, and hollers out: 'Where's my chum Johnjohn?' and Johnjohn comes tumbling downstairs and off they go into the spinney together and play for hours. You'd think, to hear them talk to each other, they were the same age. It was really Johnjohn who made him see reason about that girl; seriously, you know, he's frightfully sharp. He must have heard Mother and me talking, because next time Boy came he said: 'Uncle Boy shan't marry horrid girl and leave Johnjohn,' and that was the very day -he settled for two thousand pounds out of court. Johnjohn admires Boy so tremendously and imitates him in everything. It's so good for them both." I crossed the room and tried once more, ineffectively, to moderate the heat of the radiators; I drank some iced water and opened the window, but, besides the sharp night air, music was borne in from the next room where they were playing the wireless. I shut it and turned,back towards my wife. At length she began talking again, more drowsily. . . . "The garden's come on a lot. . . . The box hedges you planted grew five inches last year. ... I had some men down from London to put the tennis court right . . . first-class cook at the moment . . .' As the city below us began to wake we both fell asleep, but not for long; the telephone rang and a voice of hermaphroditic gaiety said: "Savoy-Carlton-Hotelgoodmorning. It is now a quarter of eight." "I didn't ask to be called, you know." "Pardon me?" "Oh, it doesn't matter." "You're welcome." As I was shaving, my wife from the bath said: "Just like old times. I'm not worrying any more, Charles." "Good." "I was so terribly afraid that two years might have made a difference. Now I know we can start again exactly where we left off." I paused in my shaving. "When?" I asked. "What? When we left off what?" "When you went away, of course." "You are npt thinking of something else, a little time before?" "Oh, Charles, that's old history. That was nothing. It was never anything. It's all over and forgotten." "I just wanted to know," I said. "We're back as we were the day I went abroad, is that it?" So we started that day exactly where we left off two years before, with my wife in tears. My wife's softness and English reticence, her-very white, small, regular teeth, her neat rosy finger-nails, her schoolgirl air of innocent mischief and her schoolgirl dress, her modern jewellery, which was made at great expense to give the impression, at a distance, of having been mass-produced, her ready, rewarding smile, her deference to me and her zeal in my interests, her motherly heart which made her cable daily to the nanny at home -- in short, her peculiar charm -- made her popular among the Americans, and our cabin on the day of departure was full of cellophane packages -- flowers, fruit, sweets, books, toys for the children--from friends she had known for a week. Stewards, like sisters in a nursing home, used to judge their passengers' importance by the number and value of these trophies; we therefore started the voyage in high esteem. My wife's first thought on coming aboard was of the passenger list. "Such a lot of friends," she said. "It's going to be a lovely trip. Let's have a cocktail party this evening." The companion-ways were no sooner cast off than she was busy with the telephone. "Julia. This is Celia -- Celia Ryder. It's lovely to find you on board. What have you been up to? Come and have a cocktail this evening and tell me all about it." "Julia who?" "Mottram. I haven't seen her for years." Nor had I; not, in fact, since my wedding day, not to speak to for any time, since the private view of my exhibition where the four canvasses of Marchmain House, lent by Brideshead, had hung together attracting much attention. Those pictures were my last contact with the Flytes; our lives, so close for a year or two, had drawn apart. Sebastian, I knew, was still abroad; Rex and Julia, I sometimes heard said, were unhappy together. Rex was not prospering quite as well as had been predicted; he remained on the fringe of the Government, prominent but vaguely suspect. He lived among the very rich, and in his speeches seemed to incline to revolutionary policies, flirting with Communists and fascists. I heard the Mottrams' names in conversation; I saw their faces now and again peeping from the Tatler, as I turned the pages impatiently waiting for someone to come, but they and I had fallen apart, as one could in England and only there, into separate worlds, little spinning planets of personal relationship; there is probably a perfect metaphor for the process to be found in physics, from the way in which, I dimly apprehend, particles of energy group and regroup themselves in separate magnetic systems, a metaphor ready to hand for the man who can speak of these things with assurance; not for me, who can only say that England abounded in these small companies of intimate friends, so that, as in this case of Julia and myself, we could live in the same street in London, see at times, a few miles distant, the same rural horizon, could have a liking one for the other, a mild curiosity about the other's fortunes, a regret, even, that we 1 should be separated, and the knowledge that either of us had only to pick up the telephone and speak by the other's pillow, enjoy the intimacies of the levee, coming in, as it were, with the morning orange juice and the sun, yet be restrained from doing so by the centripetal force of our own worlds, and the coldj interstellar space between them. My wife, perched on the back of the sofa in a litter of cellophane and silk ribbons, continued telephoning, working brightly through the passenger list ... "Yes, do of course bring him, I'm told he's sweet. . . . Yes, I've got Charles back from the wilds atyj last; isn't it lovely. . . . What a treat seeing your name in the list! It's made my trip . . . darling, we were at the Savoy-Car Iton, too; how can we have missed you? . . ." Sometimes she turned to me and said: "I have to make sure you're still really there. I haven't got used to it yet." I went up and out as we steamed slowly down the river to one of the great glass cases where the passengers stood to watch the land slip by. "Such a lot of friends," my wife had said. They looked a strange crowd to me; the emotions of leave-taking were just beginning to subside; some of them, who had been drinking till the last moment with those who were seeing them off, were still boisterous; others were planning where they would have their deck chairs; the band played unnoticed -- all were as restless as ants. I turned into some of the halls of the ship, which were huge without any splendour, as though they had been designed for a railway coach and preposterously magnified. I passed through vast bronze gates whose ornament was like the trade mark of a cake of soap which had been used once or twice; I trod carpets the colour of blotting paper; the painted panels of the walls were like blotting paper, too: kindergarten work in flat, drab colours; and between the walls were yards and yards of biscuit-coloured wood which no carpenter's tool had ever touched, wood that had been bent round corners, invisibly joined strip to strip, steamed and squeezed and polished; all over the blotting-paper carpet were strewn tables designed perhaps by a sanitary engineer, square blocks of stuffing, with square holes for sitting in, and, upholstered, it seemed, in blotting paper also; the light of the hall was suffused from scores of hollows, giving an even glow, casting no shadows -- the whole place hummed from its hundred ventilators and vibrated with the turn of the great engines below. Here I am, I thought, back from the jungle, back from the ruins. Here, where wealth is no longer gorgeous and power has no dignity. Quomodo sedet sola civitas (for I had heard that great lament, which Cordelia once quoted to me in the drawing-room of Marchmain House, sung by a half-caste choif in Guatemala, nearly a year ago). A steward came up to me. "Can I get you anything, sir?" "A whiskey-and-soda, not iced." "I'm sorry, sir, all the soda is iced." "Is the water iced, too?" "Oh yes, sir." "Well, it doesn't matter." He trotted off, puzzled, soundless in the pervading hum. "Charles." I looked behind me. Julia was sitting in a cube of blotting-paper, her hands folded in her lap, so still that I had passed by without noticing her. "I heard you were here. Celia telephoned to me. It's delightful." "What are you doing?" She opened the empty hands in her lap with a little eloquent gesture. "Waiting. My maid's unpacking; she's been so disagreeable ever since we left England. She's complaining now about my cabin. I can't think why. It seems a lap to me." The steward returned with whiskey and two jugs, one of iced water, the other of boiling water; I mixed them to the right temperature. He watched and said: "I'll remember that's how you take it, sir." Most passengers had fads; he was paid to fortify their self-esteem. Julia asked for a cup of hot chocolate. I sat by her in the next cube. "I never see you now," she said. "I never seem to see anyone I like. I don't know why." But she spoke as though it were a matter of weeks rather than of years; as though, too, before our parting we had been firm friends. It was dead contrary to the common experience of such encounters, when time is found to have built its own defensive lines, camouflaged vulnerable points, and laid a field of mines across all but a few well-trodden paths, so that, more often than not, we can only signal to one another from either side of the tangle of wire. Here she and I, who were never friends before, met on terms of long and unbroken intimacy. "What have you been doing in America?" She looked up slowly from her chocolate and, her splendid, serious eyes in mine, said: "Don't you know? I'll tell you about it sometime. I've been a mug. I thought I was in love with someone, but it didn't turn out that way." And my mind went back ten years to the evening at Brideshead, when that lovely, spidery child of nineteen, as though brought in for an hour from the nursery and nettled by lack of attention from the grown-ups, had said: "I'm causing anxiety, too, you know," and I had thought at the time, though scarcely, it now seemed to me, in long trousers myself: "How important these girls make themselves with their love affairs." Now it was different; there was nothing but humility and friendly candour in the way she spoke. I wished I could respond to her confidence, give some token of acceptance, but there was nothing in my last, flat, eventful years that I could share with her. I began instead to talk of my time in the jungle, of the comic characters I had met and the lost places I had visited, but in this mood of old friendship the tale faltered and came to an end abruptly. "I long to see the paintings," she said. "Celia wanted me to unpack some and stick them round the cabin for her cocktail party. I couldn't do that." "No. ... Is Celia as pretty as ever? I always thought she had the most delicious looks of any g