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<h2> CHAPTER XVII. — IN THE RAPHAEL GALLERY. </h2>
<p>It was nearly three o’clock, and in the Biological Laboratory the
lamps were all alight. The class was busy with razors cutting sections of
the root of a fern to examine it microscopically. A certain silent
frog-like boy, a private student who plays no further part in this story,
was working intently, looking more like a frog than usual—his
expression modest with a touch of effort. Behind Miss Heydinger, jaded and
untidy in her early manner again, was a vacant seat, an abandoned
microscope and scattered pencils and note-books.</p>
<p>On the door of the class-room was a list of those who had passed the
Christmas examination. At the head of it was the name of the aforesaid
frog-like boy; next to him came Smithers and one of the girls bracketed
together. Lewisham ingloriously headed the second class, and Miss
Heydinger’s name did not appear—there was, the list asserted,
“one failure.” So the student pays for the finer emotions.</p>
<p>And in the spacious solitude of the museum gallery devoted to the Raphael
cartoons sat Lewisham, plunged in gloomy meditation. A negligent hand
pulled thoughtfully at the indisputable moustache, with particular
attention to such portions as were long enough to gnaw.</p>
<p>He was trying to see the situation clearly. As he was just smarting
acutely under his defeat, this speaks little for the clearness of his
mind. The shadow of that defeat lay across everything, blotted out the
light of his pride, shaded his honour, threw everything into a new
perspective. The rich prettiness of his love-making had fled to some
remote quarter of his being. Against the frog-like youngster he felt a
savage animosity. And Smithers had betrayed him. He was angry, bitterly
angry, with “swats” and “muggers” who spent their
whole time grinding for these foolish chancy examinations. Nor had the
practical examination been altogether fair, and one of the questions in
the written portion was quite outside the lectures. Biver, Professor
Biver, was an indiscriminating ass, he felt assured, and so too was Weeks,
the demonstrator. But these obstacles could not blind his intelligence to
the manifest cause of his overthrow, the waste of more than half his
available evening, the best time for study in the twenty-four hours, day
after day. And that was going on steadily, a perpetual leakage of time.
To-night he would go to meet her again, and begin to accumulate to himself
ignominy in the second part of the course, the botanical section, also.
And so, reluctantly rejecting one cloudy excuse after another, he clearly
focussed the antagonism between his relations to Ethel and his immediate
ambitions.</p>
<p>Things had come so easily to him for the last two years that he had taken
his steady upward progress in life as assured. It had never occurred to
him, when he went to intercept Ethel after that <i>siance</i>, that he
went into any peril of that sort. Now he had had a sharp reminder. He
began to shape a picture of the frog-like boy at home—he was a
private student of the upper middle class—sitting in a convenient
study with a writing-table, book-shelves, and a shaded lamp—Lewisham
worked at his chest of drawers, with his greatcoat on, and his feet in the
lowest drawer wrapped in all his available linen—and in the midst of
incredible conveniences the frog-like boy was working, working, working.
Meanwhile Lewisham toiled through the foggy streets, Chelsea-ward, or,
after he had left her, tramped homeward—full of foolish imaginings.</p>
<p>He began to think with bloodless lucidity of his entire relationship to
Ethel. His softer emotions were in abeyance, but he told himself no lies.
He cared for her, he loved to be with her and to talk to her and please
her, but that was not all his desire. He thought of the bitter words of an
orator at Hammersmith, who had complained that in our present civilisation
even the elemental need of marriage was denied. Virtue had become a vice.
“We marry in fear and trembling, sex for a home is the woman’s
traffic, and the man comes to his heart’s desire when his heart’s
desire is dead.” The thing which had seemed a mere flourish, came
back now with a terrible air of truth. Lewisham saw that it was a case of
divergent ways. On the one hand that shining staircase to fame and power,
that had been his dream from the very dawn of his adolescence, and on the
other hand—Ethel.</p>
<p>And if he chose Ethel, even then, would he have his choice? What would
come of it? A few walks more or less! She was hopelessly poor, he was
hopelessly poor, and this cheat of a Medium was her stepfather! After all
she was not well-educated, she did not understand his work and his
aims....</p>
<p>He suddenly perceived with absolute conviction that after the <i>siance</i>
he should have gone home and forgotten her. Why had he felt that
irresistible impulse to seek her out? Why had his imagination spun such a
strange web of possibilities about her? He was involved now, foolishly
involved.... All his future was a sacrifice to this transitory ghost of
love-making in the streets. He pulled spitefully at his moustache.</p>
<p>His picture began to shape itself into Ethel, and her mysterious mother,
and the vague dexterous Chaffery holding him back, entangled in an
impalpable net from that bright and glorious ascent to performance and
distinction. Leaky boots and the splash of cabs for all his life as his
portion! Already the Forbes Medal, the immediate step, was as good as
lost....</p>
<p>What on earth had he been thinking about? He fell foul of his upbringing.
Men of the upper or middle classes were put up to these things by their
parents; they were properly warned against involving themselves in this
love nonsense before they were independent. It was much better....</p>
<p>Everything was going. Not only his work—his scientific career, but
the Debating Society, the political movement, all his work for
Humanity.... Why not be resolute—even now?... Why not put the thing
clearly and plainly to her? Or write? If he wrote now he could get the
advantage of the evening at the Library. He must ask her to forgo these
walks home—at least until the next examination. <i>She</i> would
understand. He had a qualm of doubt whether she would understand.... He
grew angry at this possibility. But it was no good mincing matters. If
once he began to consider her—Why should he consider her in that
way? Simply because she was unreasonable!</p>
<p>Lewisham had a transitory gust of anger.</p>
<p>Yet that abandonment of the walks insisted on looking mean to him. And she
would think it mean. Which was very much worse, somehow. <i>Why</i> mean?
Why should she think it mean? He grew angry again.</p>
<p>The portly museum policeman who had been watching him furtively, wondering
why a student should sit in front of the “Sacrifice of Lystra”
and gnaw lips and nails and moustache, and scowl and glare at that
masterpiece, saw him rise suddenly to his feet with an air of resolution,
spin on his heel, and set off with a quick step out of the gallery. He
looked neither to the right nor the left. He passed out of sight down the
staircase.</p>
<p>“Gone to get some more moustache to eat, I suppose,” said the
policeman reflectively....</p>
<p>“One ‘ud think something had bit him.”</p>
<p>After some pensive moments the policeman strolled along down the gallery
and came to a stop opposite the cartoon.</p>
<p>“Figgers is a bit big for the houses,” said the policeman,
anxious to do impartial justice. “But that’s Art. I lay
‘<i>e</i> couldn’t do anything ... not arf so good.”</p>
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