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<h2> CHAPTER XVI. — MISS HEYDINGER’S PRIVATE THOUGHTS. </h2>
<p>The way from Chelsea to Clapham and the way from South Kensington to
Battersea, especially if the former is looped about a little to make it
longer, come very near to each other. One night close upon Christmas two
friends of Lewisham’s passed him and Ethel. But Lewisham did not see
them, because he was looking at Ethel’s face.</p>
<p>“Did you see?” said the other girl, a little maliciously.</p>
<p>“Mr. Lewisham—wasn’t it?” said Miss Heydinger in a
perfectly indifferent tone.</p>
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<p>Miss Heydinger sat in the room her younger sisters called her “Sanctum.”
Her Sanctum was only too evidently an intellectualised bedroom, and a
cheap wallpaper of silvery roses peeped coquettishly from among her draped
furniture. Her particular glories were the writing-desk in the middle and
the microscope on the unsteady octagonal table under the window. There
were bookshelves of workmanship patently feminine in their facile
decoration and structural instability, and on them an array of glittering
poets, Shelley, Rossetti, Keats, Browning, and odd volumes of Ruskin,
South Place Sermons, Socialistic publications in torn paper covers, and
above, science text-books and note-books in an oppressive abundance. The
autotypes that hung about the room were eloquent of aesthetic ambitions
and of a certain impermeability to implicit meanings. There were the
Mirror of Venus by Burne Jones, Rossetti’s Annunciation, Lippi’s
Annunciation, and the Love of Life and Love and Death of Watts. And among
other photographs was one of last year’s Debating Society Committee,
Lewisham smiling a little weakly near the centre, and Miss Heydinger out
of focus in the right wing. And Miss Heydinger sat with her back to all
these things, in her black horse-hair arm-chair, staring into the fire,
her eyes hot, and her chin on her hand.</p>
<p>“I might have guessed—before,” she said. “Ever
since that <i>siance</i>. It has been different ...”</p>
<p>She smiled bitterly. “Some shop girl ...”</p>
<p>She mused. “They are all alike, I suppose. They come back—a
little damaged, as the woman says in ‘Lady Windermere’s Fan.’
Perhaps he will. I wonder ...”</p>
<p>“Why should he be so deceitful? Why should he act to me ...?</p>
<p>“Pretty, pretty, pretty—that is our business. What man
hesitates in the choice? He goes his own way, thinks his own thoughts,
does his own work ...</p>
<p>“His dissection is getting behind—one can see he takes
scarcely any notes....”</p>
<p>For a long time she was silent. Her face became more intent. She began to
bite her thumb, at first slowly, then faster. She broke out at last into
words again.</p>
<p>“The things he might do, the great things he might do. He is able,
he is dogged, he is strong. And then comes a pretty face! Oh God! <i>Why</i>
was I made with heart and brain?” She sprang to her feet, with her
hands clenched and her face contorted. But she shed no tears.</p>
<p>Her attitude fell limp in a moment. One hand dropped by her side, the
other rested on a fossil on the mantel-shelf, and she stared down into the
red fire.</p>
<p>“To think of all we might have done! It maddens me!</p>
<p>“To work, and think, and learn. To hope and wait. To despise the
petty arts of womanliness, to trust to the sanity of man....</p>
<p>“To awake like the foolish virgins,” she said, “and find
the hour of life is past!”</p>
<p>Her face, her pose, softened into self-pity.</p>
<p>“Futility ...</p>
<p>“It’s no good....” Her voice broke.</p>
<p>“I shall never be happy....”</p>
<p>She saw the grandiose vision of the future she had cherished suddenly
rolled aside and vanishing, more and more splendid as it grew more and
more remote—like a dream at the waking moment. The vision of her
inevitable loneliness came to replace it, clear and acute. She saw herself
alone and small in a huge desolation—infinitely pitiful, Lewisham
callously receding with “some shop girl.” The tears came, came
faster, until they were streaming down her face. She turned as if looking
for something. She flung herself upon her knees before the little
arm-chair, and began an incoherent sobbing prayer for the pity and comfort
of God.</p>
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<p>The next day one of the other girls in the biological course remarked to
her friend that “Heydinger-dingery” had relapsed. Her friend
glanced down the laboratory. “It’s a bad relapse,” she
said. “Really ... I couldn’t ... wear my hair like that.”</p>
<p>She continued to regard Miss Heydinger with a critical eye. She was free
to do this because Miss Heydinger was standing, lost in thought, staring
at the December fog outside the laboratory windows. “She looks
white,” said the girl who had originally spoken. “I wonder if
she works hard.”</p>
<p>“It makes precious little difference if she does,” said her
friend. “I asked her yesterday what were the bones in the parietal
segment, and she didn’t know one. Not one.”</p>
<p>The next day Miss Heydinger’s place was vacant. She was ill—from
overstudy—and her illness lasted to within three weeks of the
terminal examination. Then she came back with a pallid face and a
strenuous unavailing industry.</p>
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